100ul
PAB545Mu01-100ul-APC-Cy7
560€
A Rabbit polyclonal antibody against Human, Mouse Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase Receptor Type J (PTPRJ). This antibody is labeled with APC-Cy7.
Host: Rabbit; Species Reactivity: Human, Mouse; Clonality: polyclonal; Tested applications: WB, IHC; Concentration: 500ug/ml; Isotype: IgG; Conjugation: APC-Cy7
Sequence of the immunogen: PTPRJ (Thr567~Asn842); Buffer composition: 0.01M PBS, pH7.4, containing 0.05% Proclin-300, 50% glycerol.
Upon receipt, store at -20°C or -80°C. Prepare working aliqotes prior to storage to avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles.
Research Use Only.
If you buy Antibodies supplied by Cloud Clone Corp they should be stored frozen at - 24°C for long term storage and for short term at + 5°C.Human proteins, cDNA and human recombinants are used in human reactive ELISA kits and to produce anti-human mono and polyclonal antibodies. Modern humans (Homo sapiens, primarily ssp. Homo sapiens sapiens). Depending on the epitopes used human ELISA kits can be cross reactive to many other species. Mainly analyzed are human serum, plasma, urine, saliva, human cell culture supernatants and biological samples.
These antibodies are excite for emission at 650 nm and detected at a 676 nm wavelengths.
Cy7
Mouse or mice from the Mus musculus species are used for production of mouse monoclonal antibodies or mabs and as research model for humans in your lab. Mouse are mature after 40 days for females and 55 days for males. The female mice are pregnant only 20 days and can give birth to 10 litters of 6-8 mice a year. Transgenic, knock-out, congenic and inbread strains are known for C57BL/6, A/J, BALB/c, SCID while the CD-1 is outbred as strain.
Mus musculus
Polyclonals and antibodies
Polyclonals can be used for Western blot, immunohistochemistry on frozen slices or parrafin fixed tissues. The advantage is that there are more epitopes available in a polyclonal antiserum to detect the proteins than in monoclonal sera.
The receptors are ligand binding factors of type 1, 2 or 3 and protein-molecules that receive chemical-signals from outside a cell. When such chemical-signals couple or bind to a receptor, they cause some form of cellular/tissue-response, e.g. a change in the electrical-activity of a cell. In this sense, am olfactory receptor is a protein-molecule that recognizes and responds to endogenous-chemical signals, chemokinesor cytokines e.g. an acetylcholine-receptor recognizes and responds to its endogenous-ligand, acetylcholine. However, sometimes in pharmacology, the term is also used to include other proteins that are drug-targets, such as enzymes, transporters and ion-channels.
anticorps