Four antibody preparations against pregnancy-associated plasma protein (PAPP-A) were compared in order to find an explanation for the contradictory results published on tissue localization, clinical usefulness and biological function of PAPP-A. One of the preparations studied was a rabbit anti-PAPP-A antiserum which has been offered for general scientific use (Bischof et al. 1979). Only the IgG fraction of anti-PAPP-A antisera which appeared to be monospecific and had been further absorbed with fetal connective tissue gave specific uniform staining of the cytoplasm of the syncytiotrophoblast exclusively. Circulating PAPP-A could not be detected by RIA employing this IgG preparation in the non-pregnant state, or before 18 days after conception. Circulating PAPP-A could be detected in all seven pregnant women studied within 4 weeks after conception. Identical results were obtained with a commercially available IgG fraction against PAPP-A.