AffiGEN® Fluorescent Protein Antibody Tools
Fluorescent protein antibodies are practical detection tools for confirming tagged protein expression when native fluorescence is weak, lost after fixation, or not suitable for biochemical validation. AffiGEN provides goat polyclonal antibodies for widely used fluorescent protein tags—including GFP, RFP, mCherry, YFP, CFP, mRuby, mClover, and tdTomato—to support Western Blot (WB), Immunofluorescence (IF), Immunohistochemistry (IHC), Immunocytochemistry (ICC), ELISA, and fusion protein verification workflows.
Why Fluorescent Protein Antibodies Matter for GFP, RFP, mCherry & More
GFP, RFP, mCherry, and related fluorescent protein tags are often monitored directly by microscopy, but native fluorescence alone is not always enough. Signal can fade after fixation, permeabilization, embedding, extraction, or repeated imaging. Low-expression fusion proteins may also remain below the detection threshold, especially in complex tissues or weakly transfected cell models.
Using a primary antibody against the fluorescent tag helps convert a visual reporter into a stable immunodetection target. Researchers can amplify weak signals with labeled secondary antibodies, confirm expected molecular weight by Western blot, compare expression levels, and validate localization after sample processing.
Detection Tools for Common Fluorescent Protein Tags
Explore AffiGEN fluorescent protein antibody options for green, red, yellow, and cyan reporter tags used in recombinant expression, localization, reporter gene, and fusion protein validation studies.
Primary antibody for detecting mRuby-tagged fusion proteins in red fluorescent reporter and expression validation workflows.
View Technical DataDetection tool for mCherry-tagged proteins, red reporter constructs, fixed-cell assays, and fusion protein confirmation.
View Technical DataAntibody option for mClover-tagged proteins and green fluorescent reporter variants requiring immunoassay validation.
View Technical DataDesigned for tdTomato reporter constructs and tandem red fluorescent protein tag detection in fixed-cell or tissue workflows.
View Technical DataCore anti-GFP antibody for GFP and EGFP fusion protein detection by Western blot, IF, ICC, IHC, and ELISA workflows.
View Technical DataPan-RFP detection tool for red fluorescent protein tags and related reporter constructs in screening and validation assays.
View Technical DataAntibody for YFP-tagged fusion proteins used in protein trafficking, localization, and expression profiling studies.
View Technical DataDetection reagent for CFP-tagged proteins where cyan reporter expression requires antibody-based confirmation.
View Technical DataSelection Matrix: Match the Antibody to the Fluorescent Tag
The best fluorescent protein antibody depends on the exact tag present in the expression vector. Spectrally similar reporters may still differ structurally, so matching the antibody to the tag—GFP, RFP, mCherry, tdTomato, YFP, CFP, mRuby, or mClover—helps improve sensitivity, reduce background, and support reproducible assay results.
| Fluorescent Protein Tag Target | Recommended Primary Antibody Line | Catalog Number | Validated Assay Application Profiles |
|---|---|---|---|
| GFP / EGFP | AffiAB® Goat anti-GFP Polyclonal IgG Antibody | AFG-AB-009 |
Western Blot, Immunofluorescence, Immunocytochemistry, ELISA |
| RFP | AffiAB® Goat anti-RFP Polyclonal IgG Antibody | AFG-AB-148 |
Western Blot, IF/ICC, Multiplex Immunoassays |
| YFP | AffiAB® Goat anti-YFP Polyclonal IgG Antibody | AFG-AB-147 |
Immunohistochemistry, IF/ICC, Protein Expression Profiling |
| CFP | AffiAB® Goat anti-CFP Polyclonal IgG Antibody | AFG-AB-251 |
Localization Studies, Western Blot, Fixed-Cell Validation |
| mCherry | AffiAB® Goat anti-mCherry Polyclonal IgG Antibody | AFG-AB-267 |
Western Blot Validation, Fixed-Cell Assays, IF/ICC |
| mRuby | AffiAB® Goat Anti-mRuby Polyclonal Antibody | AFG-AB-254 |
Red Reporter Verification, Fusion Protein Validation |
| mClover | AffiAB® Goat anti-mClover Polyclonal IgG Antibody | AFG-AB-248 |
Green Reporter Validation, Quantitative Blotting |
| tdTomato | AffiAB® Goat anti-tdTomato Polyclonal IgG Antibody | AFG-AB-005 |
Tandem Red Reporter Detection, Fixed Tissue Profiling |
Where Fluorescent Protein Antibodies Are Used
Anti-GFP, anti-RFP, anti-mCherry, and related fluorescent protein antibodies extend reporter detection beyond microscopy and support routine validation across molecular biology and cell biology workflows.
Western Blot Verification
Confirm the expected molecular weight and expression integrity of GFP, RFP, mCherry, tdTomato, or other tagged fusion proteins after gel electrophoresis.
Immunofluorescence (IF)
Recover and amplify fluorescent protein signals that fade after fixation, permeabilization, mounting, or laser exposure.
Fusion Protein Validation
Verify that the gene of interest is expressed as the expected upstream or downstream fluorescent-tagged fusion product.
Reporter Quantitation
Support relative expression comparisons using blotting or plate-based assays when microscopy images alone are not quantitative enough.
Immunohistochemistry (IHC)
Improve tag visualization in frozen or paraffin-embedded sections where tissue autofluorescence or processing can reduce native signal quality.
Multiplex Multi-Tag Assays
Combine fluorescent protein tag detection with other primary antibodies when secondary antibody species and spectral channels are carefully selected.
Why Goat Polyclonal Antibodies Are Useful for Tag Detection
Goat polyclonal antibodies provide broad epitope recognition across the fluorescent protein target. This is useful when the tag is partially denatured during Western blot preparation or when fixation slightly alters the accessible structure of GFP, RFP, mCherry, or other fluorescent protein variants.
A goat host also gives researchers flexibility in multiplex assay design. When mouse or rabbit antibodies are already used for endogenous targets, a goat anti-fluorescent protein antibody can help separate tag detection from other antibody channels. Always verify secondary antibody compatibility before staining or blot development.
Fluorescent Protein Tags in the Wider Tag Detection Toolbox
Fluorescent protein tags are part of a broader toolbox used to detect, purify, localize, and validate recombinant proteins.
FLAG, HA, His, Myc, and V5 tags are compact peptide handles commonly used for detection, pull-down, purification, or expression confirmation.
GST and MBP are larger fusion partners often selected to improve protein solubility, folding, or recombinant production behavior.
GFP, RFP, mCherry, tdTomato, YFP, CFP, mRuby, and mClover provide live-cell visualization while also serving as targets for antibody-based validation.
Practical Checklist for Fluorescent Protein Antibody Selection
To obtain consistent bands, clean staining, and reliable localization data, review these points before selecting and using an anti-fluorescent protein antibody:
- Confirm the Exact Tag Variant: GFP, EGFP, RFP, mCherry, tdTomato, YFP, CFP, mRuby, and mClover are related but not interchangeable in every assay context.
- Match the Antibody to the Assay: Western blot detection requires denatured-protein performance, while IF, ICC, and IHC depend on retained epitope accessibility after fixation.
- Check Secondary Antibody Compatibility: Confirm that the labeled secondary antibody recognizes goat IgG and does not cross-react with other primary antibodies in the panel.
- Use Appropriate Controls: Include untransfected or non-expressing samples, positive tagged controls, and loading or localization controls where relevant.
FAQ: Fluorescent Protein Antibodies for GFP, RFP, mCherry & More
This FAQ supports researchers and procurement teams selecting antibodies for fluorescent protein tag detection, including GFP, RFP, mCherry, tdTomato, YFP, CFP, mRuby, and mClover.
Why use a primary antibody if my fusion construct already exhibits native fluorescence?
Primary antibody detection is useful when native fluorescence is reduced by fixation, extraction, embedding, or photobleaching, or when the signal is too weak to resolve clearly above background. It also enables biochemical confirmation by Western blot.
Which antibody line is recommended for verifying standard enhanced GFP (EGFP) arrays?
The Goat Anti-GFP Polyclonal IgG antibody (Catalog: AFG-AB-009) is the recommended AffiGEN option for GFP and EGFP fusion protein detection.
Can I use a generic anti-RFP antibody to reliably detect mCherry or tdTomato lines?
A generic anti-RFP antibody can be useful for broad red fluorescent protein detection, but variant-specific options such as Anti-mCherry (AFG-AB-267) or Anti-tdTomato (AFG-AB-005) are preferable when the exact reporter identity and assay specificity matter.
What makes goat-derived polyclonals advantageous for Western blots?
Goat polyclonal antibodies recognize multiple epitopes on the fluorescent protein target, which can improve signal robustness when some epitopes are affected by SDS-PAGE, transfer, fixation, or sample processing.
How do I minimize background staining when working with fixed tissue specimens?
Optimize blocking, antibody dilution, wash stringency, and secondary antibody selection. Include non-expressing controls to distinguish true tag signal from tissue autofluorescence or non-specific staining.
Are these antibodies compatible with automated multi-tag multiplex sorting platforms?
Yes, they can be used in multiplex designs when the other primary antibodies, secondary antibodies, and imaging channels are selected to avoid species cross-reactivity and spectral overlap.
What is the functional difference between an epitope tag and a fluorescent protein tag?
Epitope tags such as His, FLAG, HA, Myc, or V5 are short peptide handles mainly used for detection or purification. Fluorescent protein tags are larger folded reporters that enable live-cell visualization plus antibody-based confirmation.
How does AffiGEN manage international distribution and procurement for overseas institutes?
AffiGEN supports institutional purchasing, international shipment coordination, and documentation for academic, biotech, and pharmaceutical laboratories sourcing fluorescent protein antibody reagents.
Institutional Procurement Support for Fluorescent Protein Antibodies
AffiGEN supports laboratories sourcing fluorescent protein antibodies for recombinant protein detection, microscopy validation, reporter assays, and protein expression studies. Products can be supplied to universities, research institutes, biotech companies, pharmaceutical laboratories, and institutional procurement teams.
Our team can assist with quotation requests, product selection, documentation, bulk inquiries, and international ordering requirements for anti-GFP, anti-RFP, anti-mCherry, anti-tdTomato, anti-YFP, anti-CFP, anti-mRuby, and anti-mClover antibody lines.