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CD69 Monoclonal Antibody (FN50), PE-Cyanine7, eBioscience™, Invitrogen™
Mouse Monoclonal Antibody
Brand: Affymetrix eBioscience 25-0699-41
Additional Details : Weight : 0.23750kg
Description
Description: The FN50 monoclonal antibody reacts with human CD69, also known as very early activation antigen (VEA). CD69 is approximately 30 kDa and is expressed on the cell-surface as a disulfide-linked dimer. CD69 is rapidly upregulated upon activation and expressed on lymphocytes, monocytes and platelets. Applications Reported: This FN50 antibody has been reported for use in flow cytometric analysis. Applications Tested: This FN50 antibody has been pre-titrated and tested by flow cytometric analysis of resting and 6-hour TPA-activated human normal human peripheral blood cells. This can be used at 5 μL (0.06 μg) per test. A test is defined as the amount (μg) of antibody that will stain a cell sample in a final volume of 100 μL. Cell number should be determined empirically but can range from 10^5 to 10^8 cells/test. Light sensitivity: This tandem dye is sensitive photo-induced oxidation. Please protect this vial and stained samples from light. Fixation: Samples can be stored in IC Fixation Buffer (cat. 00-8222) (100 μL cell sample + 100 μL IC Fixation Buffer) or 1-step Fix/Lyse Solution (cat. 00-5333) for up to 3 days in the dark at 4°C with minimal impact on brightness and FRET efficiency/compensation. Some generalizations regarding fluorophore performance after fixation can be made, but clone specific performance should be determined empirically. Excitation: 488-561 nm; Emission: 775 nm; Laser: Blue Laser, Green Laser, Yellow-Green Laser.
CD69 (AIM, Active Inducer Molecule) is a gp28/34 disulfide bonded homodimer with a molecular weight of 60 kDa under non-reducing conditions. CD69 contains one or two N linked oligosacaride and the molecule is present on activated platelets. In normal peripheral blood a variable percentage of cells express the CD69 antigen, and it is involved in lymphocyte signal transduction. Expression CD69 is induced upon activation of T lymphocytes, and may play a role in proliferation. Furthermore, the protein may act to transmit signals in natural killer cells and platelets. Alternative splicing results in multiple transcript variants of CD69. Diseases associated with CD69 dysfunction include coccidiodomycosis and asthma.Specifications
CD69 | |
Monoclonal | |
5 μL/Test | |
PBS with 0.2% BSA and 0.09% sodium azide; pH 7.2 | |
Q07108 | |
CD69 | |
Affinity chromatography | |
RUO | |
969 | |
4° C, store in dark, DO NOT FREEZE! | |
Liquid |
Flow Cytometry | |
FN50 | |
PE-Cyanine7 | |
CD69 | |
5830438K24Rik; Activation inducer molecule; activation inducer molecule (AIM/CD69); AI452015; AIM; BL-AC/P26; CD69; CD69 antigen; CD69 antigen (p60, early T-cell activation antigen); CD69 molecule; CLEC2C; C-type lectin domain family 2 member C; C-type lectin domain family 2, member C; EA1; early activation antigen CD69; early lymphocyte activation antigen; early T-cell activation antigen p60; GP32/28; leukocyte surface antigen Leu-23; MLR-3; VEA; Very Early Activation Antigen | |
Mouse | |
25 Tests | |
Primary | |
Human | |
Antibody | |
IgG1 κ |
For Research Use Only.