General Information
| Short Description | Rabbit monoclonal IgM (Heavy chain) antibody for use in IHC-P in human samples. Datasheet included with dilution recommendations, and related reagents. |
| Applications | IHC-P |
| Host | Rabbit |
| Reactivity | Human |
| Note | STRICTLY FOR FURTHER SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH USE ONLY (RUO). MUST NOT TO BE USED IN DIAGNOSTIC OR THERAPEUTIC APPLICATIONS. |
Product Properties
| Clonality | Monoclonal |
| Clone ID | ZR249 |
| Isotype | IgG |
| Conjugation | Unconjugated |
| Purification | Affinity purified |
| Dilution Range | 1:100-200 |
| Formulation | Tris-HCI buffer containing stabilizing protein (BSA) and <0.1% ProClin |
| Storage Instruction | Store at 2‐8°C for up to 24 months. Predilute: Ready to use, no reconstitution necessary. Concentrate: Use dilution range and appropriate lab‐standardized diluent. Stability after dilution: 7 days at 24°C, 3 months at 2‐8°C, 6months at ‐20°C. |
Target Information
| Immunogen | Heavy chain of human IgM |
| Immunogen Region | Heavy chain |
| Specificity | Positive Control: Lymph node |
Additional Info
| Background | Recognizes a protein of 75kDa, identified as mu heavy chain of human immunoglobulins. It does not cross-react with alpha (IgA) , gamma (IgG) , epsilon (IgE) , or delta (IgD) , heavy chains, T-cells, monocytes, granulocytes, or erythrocytes. Monomeric IgM is expressed as a membrane-bound antibody on the surface of B cells and as a pentamer when secreted by plasma cells. IgM antibody is prominent in early immune responses to most antigens. Aberrant levels are associated with immune deficiency states, hereditary deficiencies, myeloma, Waldenstrom s macroglobulinemia, chronic infection, and hepatocellular disease. This MAb is useful in identifying leukemias, plasmacytomas, and certain non-Hodgkin s lymphomas. The most common feature of these malignancies is the restricted expression of a single heavy chain class. Demonstration of clonality in lymphoid infiltrates indicates that the infiltration is clonal and therefore malignant. |
Information sourced from Uniprot.org

