Description:

Size: 100ul

Catalog no.: bs-11180R-A594

Price: 380 EUR

Product details

Modification Site

None

Target Antigen

ABCA7

French translation

anticorps

Clonality

Polyclonal

Modification

Unmodified

Excitation emission

590nm/617nm

Concentration

1ug per 1ul

Subcellular location

Extracellular

Tested applications

FCM, IF(IHC-P)

Crossreactivity

Human, Mouse, Rat

Conjugated

Alexa conjugate 1

Conjugated with

ALEXA FLUOR® 594

Clone

Polyclonal antibody

Purification

Purified by Protein A.

Category

Conjugated Primary Antibodies

Conjugation

Alexa Fluor,ALEXA FLUOR® 594

Host Organism

Rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus)

Also known as

Anti-ABCA7 PAb ALEXA FLUOR 594

Recommended dilutions

FCM(1:20-100), IF(IHC-P)(1:50-200)

Specificity

This is a highly specific antibody against ABCA7.

Long name

ABCA7 Polyclonal Antibody, ALEXA FLUOR 594 Conjugated

Cross-reactive species details

Due to limited amount of testing and knowledge, not every possible cross-reactivity is known.

Source

This antibody was obtained by immunization of the host with KLH conjugated synthetic peptide derived from human ABCA7

Storage conditions

Store this antibody in aqueous buffered solution containing 1% BSA, 50% glycerol and 0.09% sodium azide. Keep refrigerated at 2 to 8 degrees Celcius for up to one year.

Properties

For facs or microscopy Alexa 1 conjugate.If you buy Antibodies supplied by Bioss Primary Conjugated Antibodies. ALEXA FLUOR they should be stored frozen at - 24°C for long term storage and for short term at + 5°C.

Synonyms

ABC transporter ABCA7; ABC transporter member 7; ABCA SSN; ABCX; ATP binding cassette sub family A ABC1 member 7; ATP binding cassette sub family A member 7; ATP binding Cassette Transporter A7;,FLJ40025; Macrophage ABC transporter; ABCA7_HUMAN.

Background of the antigen

ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters are an evolutionarily conserved family of widely-expressed proteins that use ATP hydrolysis to catalyze the transport of various molecules across extracellular and intracellular membranes. Eukaryotic ABC transporters are largely responsible for trafficking hydrophobic compounds either within the cell as part of a metabolic process, outside the cell for transport to other organs, or for secretion from the body. The cholesterol-responsive transporter, ABCA7, maps to human chromosome 19 and mouse chromosome 10 and has been reported as a candidate regulator of ceramide transport in epidermal lipid reorganization. High expression levels of ABCA7 have been reported in myelolymphatic tissues, reticuloendothelial cells, peripheral leukocytes, thymus, spleen and bone marrow. This expression pattern of the two alternatively-spliced isoforms also indicates an involvement in lipid homeostasis in cells of the immune system, though the complete role of ABCA7 is not yet known. Full-length type I ABCA7 has shown plasma membrane localization, while the type II splicing variant has shown expression predominantly in the endoplasmic reticulum.