anti-human apoD mAb (D544), unconjugated

anti-human apoD mAb (D544), unconjugated

3714-3-250

Publications: 4
Documents
Questions?
Validated for our assays.

Content

Monoclonal antibody D544, unconjugated. Supplied at 0.5 mg/ml in PBS with 0.02% sodium azide.

In stock

Delivery 4-9 business days

Shipping $0.00

1 / 1
Anti-human apoD mAb (D263), biotin
  • Reactivity:
  • Application:
  • Plates:
  • Code: 3714-6-250
  • Publications:

Product specifications

Intended use

This monoclonal antibody enables specific detection of human apoD in immunoassays such as ELISA.

Serum/Plasma samples

Recommendation

D544 is recommended as capture mAb in ELISA in combination with detection mAb D263 (product code 3714-6).

Product details

Productanti-human apoD mAb (D544), unconjugated
ApplicationELISA
AnalyteapoD
AntibodyD544
ConjugateUnconjugated
ClonalityMonoclonal
ImmunogenRecombinant human apoD
HostMouse
IsotypeIgG1
ReactivityHuman
Specificity

Human apolipoprotein D (apoD)

Purification

Purified from in vitro cultures by protein G affinity chromatography.

Concentration0.5 mg/ml
Supplied in

PBS with 0.02% sodium azide. Sterile-filtered (0.2 µm).

Contents

Monoclonal antibody D544, unconjugated. Supplied at 0.5 mg/ml in PBS with 0.02% sodium azide.

Shipping and Storage

Shipping

Shipped at ambient temperature.

Storage

Store product at 4-8°C or frozen at -20°C or below. Avoid repeated freezing/thawing.

Shelf lifeAt least 18 months from date of receipt.

apoD

Analyte descriptionApolipoprotein D (apoD, also known as apolipoproteinD and apo D) is a lipocalin that binds lipids and steroid hormones. The apoD gene is expressed in many tissues, e.g. brain, testis, adrenal gland, kidney, placenta, spleen, lung, and pancreas. ApoD likely functions as a transporter of lipids or lipid hormones, and is involved in the interaction between HDL and LDL. ApoD gene polymorphisms are associated with obesity, hyperinsulinemia, and type 2 diabetes. Normal concentration of apoD in human plasma is approximately 0.05-0.15 g/L.
Gene ID347
Loading publications...