This Mouse Apolipoprotein H (Apo-H) ELISA Kit from Innovative Research is intended for quantitative detection of mouse APOH in cell culture supernates, serum and plasma (heparin, EDTA). Strip well format. Reagents for up to 96 tests.
This mouse APOH ELISA Kit is based on standard sandwich enzyme-linked immune-sorbent assay technology. A monoclonal antibody from rat specific for APOH has been precoated onto 96-well plates. Standards(Expression system for standard: NSO, Immunogen sequence: G20-C345) and test samples are added to the wells, a biotinylated detection polyclonal antibody from goat specific for APOH is added subsequently and then followed by washing with PBS or TBS buffer. Avidin-Biotin-Peroxidase Complex is added and unbound conjugates are washed away with PBS or TBS buffer. HRP substrate TMB are used to visualize HRP enzymatic reaction. TMB is catalyzed by HRP to produce a blue color product that changed into yellow after adding acidic stop solution. The density of yellow is proportional to the mouse APOH amount of sample captured in plate.
- Detection Target: Apolipoprotein H (Apo-H)
- Uniprot ID: )
- Reactivity: Mouse
- Cross-Reactivity: There is no detectable cross-reactivity with other relevant proteins.
- Range: 312pg/ml-20000pg/ml
- Sensitivity: <50pg/ml
- Storage Conditions: Store at 4?C for 6 months, at -20?C for 12 months. Avoid multiple freeze-thaw cycles. (Shipped with wet ice)
Additional Information: The capture antibody is a monoclonal antibody from rat, the detection antibody is a biotinylated polyclonal antibody from goat. Expression system for standard: Apolipoprotein H (Apo-H), previously known as ?2-glycoprotein I and beta-2 glycoprotein I, is a 38 kDa multifunctional apolipoprotein that in humans is encoded by the APOH gene. This gene is mapped to 11 E1; 11 71.8 Cm. Apolipoprotein H has been implicated in a variety of physiologic pathways including lipoprotein metabolism, coagulation, and the production of antiphospholipid autoantibodies. APOH may be a required cofactor for anionic phospholipid binding by the antiphospholipid autoantibodies found in sera of many patients with lupus and primary antiphospholipid syndrome, but it does not seem to be required for the reactivity of antiphospholipid autoantibodies associated with infections. ; Immunogen sequence: 369