Antibody Epitope Destruction by Enzymatic Digestion
Symptom
Antibody fails to recognize target antigen on cells after enzymatic tissue dissociation or adherent cell detachment, resulting in absent or dramatically reduced staining intensity for markers like cadherins despite confirmed gene/protein expression by other methods.
Common Causes
1Trypsin/EDTA treatment of adherent cells cleaves and inactivates surface proteins like cadherins, destroying antibody binding epitopes
2Harsh enzymatic digestion protocols (collagenase, dispase, papain) used for solid tissue dissociation damage surface antigens
3Prolonged enzyme exposure or excessive enzyme concentration increases epitope cleavage and protein degradation
4Different antibody clones recognize distinct epitopes; some clones target enzyme-sensitive regions while others bind protease-resistant domains
Solutions
1Optimize tissue/cell preparation protocols by using gentler detachment solutions like Accutase instead of Trypsin/EDTA for adherent cells
2Reduce enzyme concentration and incubation time to minimum required for cell dissociation; monitor dissociation progress microscopically
3Pilot test multiple antibody clones against the same target to identify clones recognizing protease-resistant epitopes
4Include enzyme-free mechanical dissociation methods where feasible (gentle scraping, repeated pipetting, fine mincing) to preserve surface epitopes