Human Granulocyte Colony Stimulating Factor,G-CSF ELISA Kit

Information

Name

  • Human Granulocyte Colony Stimulating Factor,G-CSF ELISA Kit

Size

  • 96T

Catalog No

  • E0121Hu

Price

  • 634 €

Extended details

Description

  • Colonies can be formed by stimulating factors or recombinant GM-CSF and CSFs activity expressed in Units compared to a standard.Aplha, transcription related growth factors and stimulating factors or repressing nuclear factors are complex subunits of proteins involved in cell differentiation
  • Complex subunit associated factors are involved in hybridoma growth, Eosinohils, eritroid proliferation and derived from promotor binding stimulating subunits on the DNA binding complex
  • NFKB 105 subunit for example is a polypetide gene enhancer of genes in B cells.

Properties

  • E05 478 566 350 170 or Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assays,E05 478 566 350 170 or Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assays,Human proteins, cDNA and human recombinants are used in human reactive ELISA kits and to produce anti-human mono and polyclonal antibodies
  • Modern humans (Homo sapiens, primarily ssp. Homo sapiens sapiens)
  • Depending on the epitopes used human ELISA kits can be cross reactive to many other species
  • Mainly analyzed are human serum, plasma, urine, saliva, human cell culture supernatants and biological samples.

Gene

  • Granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF or GCSF), also known as colony-stimulating factor 3 (CSF 3), is a glycoprotein that stimulates the bone marrow to produce granulocytes and stem cells and release them into the bloodstream
  • Functionally, it is a cytokine and hormone, a type of colony-stimulating factor, and is produced by a number of different tissues
  • The pharmaceutical analogs of naturally occurring G-CSF are called filgrastim and lenograstim.

Sample Types

  • serum, blood, plasma, saliva, urine, and other related tissue liquid

Test

  • ELISA Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays Code 90320007 SNOMED

Platform

  • Microplate Reader

Tissue

  • granulocyte

Object tested

  • Human