Myoglobin antibody (AA 2-154) (AbBy Fluor® 488)
Quick Overview for Myoglobin antibody (AA 2-154) (AbBy Fluor® 488) (ABIN6978073)
Target
See all Myoglobin (MB) AntibodiesReactivity
Host
Clonality
Conjugate
Application
Clone
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Binding Specificity
- AA 2-154
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Cross-Reactivity
- Human, Rat
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Purification
- Purified by Protein G.
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Immunogen
- Purified Human Myoglobin (Natural Human Myoglobin protein)
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Isotype
- IgG
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Application Notes
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IF(IHC-P) 1:50-200
IF(ICC) 1:50-200 -
Restrictions
- For Research Use only
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Format
- Liquid
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Concentration
- 1 μg/μL
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Buffer
- Aqueous buffered solution containing 0.01M TBS ( pH 7.4) with 1 % BSA, 0.03 % Proclin300 and 50 % Glycerol.
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Preservative
- ProClin
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Precaution of Use
- This product contains ProClin: a POISONOUS AND HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE, which should be handled by trained staff only.
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Storage
- -20 °C
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Storage Comment
- Store at -20°C. Aliquot into multiple vials to avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles.
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Expiry Date
- 12 months
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- Myoglobin (MB)
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Alternative Name
- Myoglobin
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Background
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Synonyms: MYO, MB, MGC13548, PVALB, MYG_HUMAN.
Background: Myoglobin is a small heme containing protein responsible for the oxygen deposition in muscle tissues. Only one form of myoglobin is expressed in cardiac and skeletal muscles. Myoglobin is known as a marker of myocardial damage and it has been used for more than three decades. Nowadays it still is very commonly used in clinical practice as an early marker of AMI. It appears in patient's blood 1 to 3 hours after onset of the symptoms, reaching peak level within 8 to 12 hours. Myoglobin is not so cardiac specific as cTnI or cTnT. Because of high myoglobin concentration in skeletal muscle tissue, even minor skeletal muscle injury results in the significant increase of myoglobin concentration in blood. Thus myoglobin is used together with cTnI or cTnT in clinical practise for better specificity in AMI diagnosis.
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Gene ID
- 4151
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UniProt
- P02144
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Pathways
- Brown Fat Cell Differentiation
Target
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