Flow cytometric analysis of Foxp3 / Transcription Factor Staining Buffer Set fixed and permeabilized BALB/c mouse splenocytes labelling Mouse FOXP3 antibody at 1/100 dilution (2 μg) / (Right panel) compared with a Mouse IgG1 (Left panel) isotype control. Goat Anti - Rat IgG Alexa Fluor® 488 was used as the secondary antibody. Then cells were stained with CD4 - Brilliant Violet 421™ antibody separately.
Product Details
Product Details
Product Specification
| Host | Rat |
| Antigen | FOXP3 |
| Synonyms | Forkhead box protein P3; Scurfin; Foxp3 |
| Location | Cytoplasm, Nucleus |
| Accession | Q99JB6 |
| Clone Number | S-R499 |
| Antibody Type | Rat mAb |
| Isotype | IgG2b |
| Application | ICFCM |
| Reactivity | Ms |
| Positive Sample | BALB/c mouse splenocytes |
| Purification | Protein G |
| Concentration | 2 mg/ml |
| Conjugation | Unconjugated |
| Physical Appearance | Liquid |
| Storage Buffer | PBS pH7.4 |
| Stability & Storage | 12 months from date of receipt / reconstitution, 2 to 8 °C as supplied |
Dilution
| application | dilution | species |
| ICFCM | 1:100 | Ms |
Background
FOXP3 (Forkhead box protein P3) is a 47 kDa transcription factor that acts as the master immune‐suppression switch: it is expressed almost exclusively in CD4⁺ regulatory T (Treg) cells, where it binds to conserved forkhead DNA motifs to repress genes that drive effector T-cell proliferation (e.g., IL-2, IFN-γ) and simultaneously up-regulate genes for inhibitory cytokines (IL-10, TGF-β) and checkpoint molecules (CTLA-4, LAG-3); its N-terminal repressor domain recruits co-repressors such as EZH2 and HDACs, while the C-terminal winged-helix domain mediates DNA contact and homo-multimerization essential for chromatin looping at the IL-2 locus, and mutations in either segment—exemplified by the Δ2 splice variant or the human IPEX mutations p.A384T and p.R397W—abolish DNA binding or nuclear localization, unleashing fatal multi-organ autoimmunity; post-translational control further tunes Treg stability: TCR and IL-2 signals activate PI3K–AKT–mTOR cascades that phosphorylate FOXP3 at S418, enhancing its DNA affinity, whereas inflammatory cytokines like TNF-α and IL-6 trigger PIM1/CK2-mediated phosphorylation at S422 and ubiquitination by STUB1, leading to proteasomal degradation and conversion of Tregs into pro-inflammatory TH17 cells; in cancer, hypoxia-induced HIF-1α and oncogenic STAT3 similarly destabilize FOXP3, weakening intra-tumoral Treg suppressive function and paradoxically enabling immune evasion, whereas demethylating agents or low-dose IL-2 restore FOXP3 expression and are being tested clinically to curb graft-versus-host disease and autoimmunity, making FOXP3 both a biomarker of immune tolerance and a druggable node at the intersection of infection, autoimmunity, and cancer.
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