The Future of Research Communications and e-Scholarship

Reporting Research Antibody Use: How to Increase Experimental Reproducibility

Authors: Matthew A Helsby

Joe R Fenn

Andrew D Chalmers

Research antibodies are used in a wide range of bioscience disciplines, yet it is common to hear dissatisfaction amongst researchers with respect to their quality. Although blame is often attributed to the manufacturers, scientists are not doing all they can to help themselves. One example of this is in the reporting of research antibody use. Publications routinely lack key details, including the host species, code number and even the company who supplied the antibody. Authors also fail to demonstrate that validation of the antibodies has taken place. These omissions make it harder for reviewers to establish the likely reliability of the results and for researchers to reproduce the experiments. The scale of this problem, combined with high profile concerns about experimental reproducibility, has caused the Nature Publishing Group to include a section on antibody information in their recent Reporting Checklist for Life Science Articles. In this commentary we consider the issue of reporting research antibody use and ask what details authors should be including in their publications to improve experimental reproducibility.

Journal: F1000Research 2013

Archive: https://archive.force11.net/node/6360

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Related Articles

FORCE2023 Conference
APRIL 18-20 (Online)

Thinking/Acting: The Global and the Local

#force2023

Membership

Join the FORCE11 community and take part in our groups, conference, summer school, post on FORCE11, and attend other events.

Membership

FORCE2023 Sponsors

The FORCE11 community thanks the following organizations for their financial support of the
FORCE2023 annual conference.