Immunoglobulin G (IgG) is an antibody that protects the body from infections, it can bind to viruses, bacteria and fungi. It is the most abundant antibody found in blood, lymph fluid, cerebrospinal fluid and peritoneal fluid and is essential in the humoral immune response. IgG uses agglutination to immobilize pathogens and allows phagocytic immune cells to recognize the pathogen by using opsonization. It can do this because it is a monomeric immunoglobulin made of two heavy chains and two light chains, making up two antigen binding sites. IgG is highly variable due to its composition of amino acids in the terminal portion. The C terminal is used for binding with the cell membrane, the complement system and allows it to pass through the placenta, thus providing protection to the fetus, which no other immunoglobulin can do. Thanks to the abundance and specificity towards antigens, IgG is the principal antibody used in immunological research and clinical diagnostics, making it a great option for ELISA. IgG is retained in the body for long periods of time, the longevity in serum makes it useful for immunization. Detection of IgG is used for indicating prior infection and vaccination.
Product Features
Additional Notes
Strip plates and additional reagents allow for use in multiple experiments
Quantitative protein detection
Establishes normal range
The best products for confirmation of antibody array data
Standard Curves
Spiking & Recovery Results
Linearity Results
Application Notes
Kit Components
Pre-Coated 96-well Strip Microplate
Wash Buffer
Stop Solution
Assay Diluent(s)
Lyophilized Standard
Biotinylated Detection Antibody
Streptavidin-Conjugated HRP
TMB One-Step Substrate
Other Materials Required
Distilled or deionized water
Precision pipettes to deliver 2 µl to 1 µl volumes
Adjustable 1-25 µl pipettes for reagent preparation
100 µl and 1 liter graduated cylinders
Tubes to prepare standard and sample dilutions
Absorbent paper
Microplate reader capable of measuring absorbance at 450nm
Log-log graph paper or computer and software for ELISA data analysis
Protocol Outline
Prepare all reagents, samples and standards as instructed in the manual.
Add 100 µl of standard or sample to each well.
Incubate 2.5 h at RT or O/N at 4°C.
Add 100 µl of prepared biotin antibody to each well.
Incubate 1 h at RT.
Add 100 µl of prepared Streptavidin solution to each well.
Incubate 45 min at RT.
Add 100 µl of TMB One-Step Substrate Reagent to each well.
Incubate 30 min at RT.
Add 50 µl of Stop Solution to each well.
Read at 450 nm immediately.
Storage/Stability
The entire kit may be stored at -20°C for up to 1 year from the date of shipment. Avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles. The kit may be stored at 4°C for up to 6 months. For extended storage, it is recommended to store at -80°C.
Erdemli O. Keskin D., Tezcaner A. Influence of excipients on characteristics and release profiles of poly(?-caprolactone) microspheres containing immunoglobulin G. Mater Sci Eng C Mater Biol Appl. 2015 Mar;48:391-9. doi: 10.1016/j.msec.2014.12.044
Lei, Y., Liu, X., Lu, L., Liu, C., Xu, R., Huang, S., Jiang, Z. (2020). Rapid preparation of 1-vinylimidazole based non-affinity polymers for the highly-selective purification of antibodies from multiple biological sources. Journal of Chromatography A, 1632, 461607. doi:10.1016/j.chroma.2020.461607Â
Andrabi R, Bala M, Kumar R, Wig N, Hazarika A, et al. (2012) Neutralization of Tier-2 Viruses and Epitope Profiling of Plasma Antibodies from Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infected Donors from India. PLoS ONE 7(8): e43704. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0043704
Andrabi, Raiees, et al. "Relative reactivity of HIV-1 polyclonal plasma antibodies directed to V3 and MPER regions suggests immunodominance of V3 over MPER and dependence of high anti-V3 antibody titers on virus persistence." Archives of virology 156.10 (2011): 1787.