Anti-Transferrin receptor [Q1/71]
Invented by Dr Jacqueline Cordell from University of Oxford
Invented at University of Oxford
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- References (1)
- Inventor Info
Info
| Catalogue Number | 151371 |
| Applications | FACS IHC WB |
| Antigen/Gene or Protein Targets | Transferrin receptor (CD71) |
| Reactivity | Human |
| Relevance | The transferrin receptor is a glycoprotein composed of disulfide-linked polypeptide chains. It is ubiquitously distributed on the cell surface of actively growing human cells. Q1/71 can be used as a marker of proliferation. |
| Host | Mouse |
| Immunogen | Foetal liver cells |
| Subclass | IgG1 |
| Myeloma Used | P3/NS1/1-Ag4.1 |
| Recommended Growing Conditions | RPMI 1640 + 10% FCS + penicillin (100U/ml) + streptomycin (100mg/l) + glutamine (2mM) + HAT |
| Notes | Ultroser G can be used at 1% if the cells are not growing well |
| Research Area | Cancer, Cardiovascular, Cell Type or Organelle Marker, Immunology, Metabolism, Stem Cell Biology |
References: 1 entry
CD Guide for CD71 (1989) In Knapp W, et al (eds) Leucocyte Typing IV, Oxford University Press, Oxford, New York and Tokyo, p 1091
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References: 1 entry
CD Guide for CD71 (1989) In Knapp W, et al (eds) Leucocyte Typing IV, Oxford University Press, Oxford, New York and Tokyo, p 1091
Add a reference