CD4 (CD4 Receptor, CD4mut, T Cell Surface, Antigen T4/Leu3, T Cell Surface Glycoprotein CD4) (APC)
Katalog-Nummer C2255-27S-APC-100ul
Size : 100ul
Marke : US Biological
C2255-27S-APC CD4 (CD4 Receptor, CD4mut, T Cell Surface, Antigen T4/Leu3, T Cell Surface Glycoprotein CD4) (APC)
Clone Type
PolyclonalHost
mouseSource
ratSwiss Prot
P05540Isotype
IgG2aGrade
Affinity PurifiedApplications
IHCCrossreactivity
RtShipping Temp
Blue IceStorage Temp
4°C Do Not FreezeCD4, a single chain transmembrane glycoprotein is found on a T cell subset (helper/inducer) representing 45% of peripheral blood lympocytes. It is also present on 80% of thymocytes and at a lower level on monocytes. It is involved in recognition of antigen presented along with MHC class II by APCs. It serves as receptor for HIV. Antibody to CD4 recognizes T-helper cells required for recognition of class II antigens. It reacts with 60% of peripheral blood E rosette-positive (E+) cells while showing negligible reactivity with E+ cells, monocytes, granulocytes, EBV-transformed B cell lines, and mouse splenocytes.||CD4-positive T-cells provide helper funciton in pokeweed mitogen driven B-cell differentiation. Moreover, anti-CD4 selectively blocks the autologus mixed lymphocyte reaction (AMLR) with minimal or no effect on the allogeneic MLR (allo-MLR). Blocking of the autoreactivity occurs when either autologus B-lymphocytes or macrophages are used as stimulators. Specificity closely approximates the binding spectrum of OKT4 and Leu-3 antibodies both of which also recognize 55 to 65% of human peripheral blood T-cells.||Recommended Secondary Reagents: Goat anti-mouse IgG: HRP conjugate (rat absorbed), IgG Goat anti mouse IgG: RPE (rat adsorbed)||Hybridoma: Spleen cells from immunized mice were fused with cells of the mouse NS1 myeloma cell line||Applications:|Immunohistochemistry (frozen)|Optimal working dilutions to be determined by researcher.||Storage and Stability: May be stored at 4°C for short-term only. For long-term storage and to avoid repeated freezing and thawing, aliquot and add glycerol (40-50%). Freeze at -20°C. Aliquots are stable for at least 12 months at -20°C. For maximum recovery of product, centrifuge the original vial after thawing and prior to removing the cap. Further dilutions can be made in assay buffer.||Note: Applications are based on unconjugated antibody.