PLA detection relies on DNA-conjugated secondary antibodies that carry short oligonucleotide sequences. When two target proteins are within ~30–40 nm, the oligonucleotides can be enzymatically ligated into a circular DNA template.
This circular template then undergoes rolling circle amplification (RCA), producing a long DNA strand that can be detected by fluorescent hybridization probes. The amplification provides sensitivity, enabling detection of individual proximity events.
The ~30–40 nm threshold is determined by antibody size (~15 nm each) plus the DNA linkers. This is significantly better than colocalizationLoading... (~70–100 nm) but still 3–40 x larger than the 1–10 nm scale of true molecular binding.