Standard curve
Product Details
Product Details
Product Specification
| Antigen | Ig |
| Immunogen | Recombinant Protein |
| Reactivity | Ms |
| Stability & Storage | 2 to 8 °C as supplied. |
Kit
| Precision |
Intra-assay: NA; Inter-assay: NA |
| Sample type | Cell culture supernatant |
| Assay type | Sandwich (qualitatively) |
| Assay time | 15 minutes |
| Species reactivity | Mouse |
| CROSS REACTIVITY | / |
| INTERFERENCE | / |
| NIBSC convert | / |
Background
In immunology, antibodies (immunoglobulins (Ig)) are classified into several types called isotypes or classes. The isotype of a primary antibody and the application it is being used in can result in background staining. Primary antibody background noise can be caused by binding to Fc receptors on target cells; by non-specific interactions with cellular proteins, carbohydrates, and lipids; or by cell autofluorescence. There are five antibody isotypes (IgA, IgD, IgE, IgG, and IgM) from mice, same as humans. Each isotype has a different heavy chain. Isotypes are also called classes. Another name for antibodies is immunoglobulin, hence the suffix of 'Ig' to designate antibody classes and subclasses. Naive B cells produce IgM and IgD. During B cell maturation, through isotypic switching, a mature B cell will produce one of IgG, or IgA, or IgE isotypes and subclasses. Different isotypes have different half-lives in vivo, ranging from 12 hours to 8 days.
Picture
Picture
ELISA
Protocol Diagram
