Its depend on the type of Abs and its stability, antibodies 1 hour are fine at room temperature (for several plant viral AB it works after 3 days with no harm , Usually I stored at 4°C and these work perfectly fine for months), although it depends on the Abs and how it was produced and manufactured; but, generally, 1 hour is not a big time to lose their binding activities. Antibody is like any protein, some can't be frozen, most need to be stored at 2 to 8ᵒC and can last for several months. Antibodies are meant to be stored at -20C , each freeze-thaw cycle lead to reagent be less efficient. Ideally, -20C antibodies have glycerol-like components pre-added and you do not really need to keep them out for too long to thaw. good luck
Its depend on the type of Abs and its stability, antibodies 1 hour are fine at room temperature (for several plant viral AB it works after 3 days with no harm , Usually I stored at 4°C and these work perfectly fine for months), although it depends on the Abs and how it was produced and manufactured; but, generally, 1 hour is not a big time to lose their binding activities. Antibody is like any protein, some can't be frozen, most need to be stored at 2 to 8ᵒC and can last for several months. Antibodies are meant to be stored at -20C , each freeze-thaw cycle lead to reagent be less efficient. Ideally, -20C antibodies have glycerol-like components pre-added and you do not really need to keep them out for too long to thaw. good luck
There is no worry about that! My only concern was if the binding would be reduced cause optimal temperature of lectins for binding with proteins is 4•C.