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United States (US)

Factor IX antibody

Cat. No. GTX79808

Host

Sheep

Clonality

Polyclonal

Isotype

IgG

Application

WB, ELISA

Reactivity

Human
Package
1 mg ($399)

APPLICATION

Application Note

*Optimal dilutions/concentrations should be determined by the researcher.
Application Recommended Dilution
WB Assay dependent
ELISA Assay dependent
Not tested in other applications.

Calculated MW

52 kDa. ( Note )

PROPERTIES

Form

Liquid

Buffer

50mM Sodium Phosphate, 100mM NaCl, 1mM EDTA

Preservative

No preservative

Storage

Store as concentrated solution. Centrifuge briefly prior to opening vial. For short-term storage (1-2 weeks), store at 4ºC. For long-term storage, aliquot and store at -20ºC or below. Avoid multiple freeze-thaw cycles.

Concentration

10 mg/ml (Please refer to the vial label for the specific concentration.)

Antigen Species

Human

Immunogen

Full length native protein (purified) (Human).

Purification

Protein G purified
From serum

Conjugation

Unconjugated

RRID

AB_11166884

Note

For laboratory research use only. Not for any clinical, therapeutic, or diagnostic use in humans or animals. Not for animal or human consumption.

Purchasers shall not, and agree not to enable third parties to, analyze, copy, reverse engineer or otherwise attempt to determine the structure or sequence of the product.

TARGET

Synonyms

F9,F9 p22,FIX,HEMB,P19,PTC,THPH8,coagulation factor IX,Factor IX

Cellular Localization

Secreted

Background

This gene encodes vitamin K-dependent coagulation factor IX that circulates in the blood as an inactive zymogen. This factor is converted to an active form by factor XIa, which excises the activation peptide and thus generates a heavy chain and a light chain held together by one or more disulfide bonds. The role of this activated factor IX in the blood coagulation cascade is to activate factor X to its active form through interactions with Ca+2 ions, membrane phospholipids, and factor VIII. Alterations of this gene, including point mutations, insertions and deletions, cause factor IX deficiency, which is a recessive X-linked disorder, also called hemophilia B or Christmas disease. Alternative splicing results in multiple transcript variants encoding different isoforms that may undergo similar proteolytic processing. [provided by RefSeq, Sep 2015]

Database

Research Area

REFERENCE

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REVIEW

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Package List Price ($)
$ 399