ELISA, Immunohistochemistry (IHC), Western Blotting (WB)
Hersteller Produkt- Nr.
608-1102
Hersteller
Rockland
Verwendungszweck
Horse IgG (H&L) Antibody
Kreuzreaktivität (Details)
Assay by immunoelectrophoresis resulted in a single precipitin arc against anti-Goat Serum, Horse IgG and Horse Serum.
Produktmerkmale
Anti-Horse IgG F(ab')2 Rhodamine Antibody generated in goat is a proteolytic fragment of immunoglobulin G (IgG) obtained by limited digestion with the enzyme pepsin under controlled conditions of temperature, time and pH . F(ab')2 Molecules lack the Fc portion of IgG and therefore receptors that bind horse IgG F(c) will not bind horse IgG F(ab')2 Molecules. Secondary Antibodies are available in a variety of formats and conjugate types. When choosing a secondary antibody product, consideration must be given to species and immunoglobulin specificity, conjugate type, fragment and chain specificity, level of cross-reactivity, and host-species source and fragment composition.
Aufreinigung
This product was prepared from monospecific antiserum by immunoaffinity chromatography using Horse IgG coupled to agarose.
Application Note: Anti-Horse IgG antibody has been tested by ELISA and is suitable for western blot and immunohistochemistry, as well as other assays requiring lot-to-lot consistency. Immunohistochemistry Dilution: 1:1,000 - 1:5,000 Western Blot Dilution: 1:2,000 - 1:10,000 ELISA Dilution: 1:20,000 - 1:100,000 Other: User Optimized
Beschränkungen
Nur für Forschungszwecke einsetzbar
Format
Liquid
Konzentration
10 mg/mL
Buffer
Optional[Buffer]: 0.02 M Potassium Phosphate, 0.15 M Sodium Chloride, pH 7.2
Lagerung
4 °C,-20 °C
Informationen zur Lagerung
Store vial at 4° C prior to opening. This product is stable for several weeks at 4° C as an undiluted liquid. Dilute only prior to immediate use. For extended storage aliquot contents and freeze at -20° C or below. Avoid cycles of freezing and thawing.
Secreted as part of the adaptive immune response by plasma B cells, immunoglobulin G constitutes 75 % of serum immunoglobulins. Immunoglobulin G binds to viruses, bacteria, as well as fungi and facilitates their destruction or neutralization via agglutination (and thereby immobilizing them), activation of the compliment cascade, and opsonization for phagocytosis. The whole IgG molecule possesses both the F(c) region, recognized by high-affinity Fc receptor proteins, as well as the F(ab) region possessing the epitope-recognition site. Both heavy and light chains of the antibody molecule are present. Secondary Antibodies are available in a variety of formats and conjugate types. When choosing a secondary antibody product, consideration must be given to species and immunoglobulin specificity, conjugate type, fragment and chain specificity, level of cross-reactivity, and host-species source and fragment composition.