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Human Clusterin Biotinylated Antibody

R&D Systems, part of Bio-Techne | Catalog # BAM29373

R&D Systems, part of Bio-Techne
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BAM29373

Key Product Details

Species Reactivity

Human

Applications

ELISA Detection (Matched Antibody Pair)

Label

Biotin

Antibody Source

Monoclonal Mouse IgG2B Clone # 350207

Product Specifications

Immunogen

Mouse myeloma cell line NS0-derived recombinant human Clusterin
Asp75-Glu501
Accession # NP_001822

Specificity

Detects human Clusterin in ELISAs.

Clonality

Monoclonal

Host

Mouse

Isotype

IgG2B

Applications for Human Clusterin Biotinylated Antibody

Application
Recommended Usage

Human Clusterin Sandwich Immunoassay

ELISA Detection (Matched Antibody Pair)
Recommended Concentration: 0.5-2.0 µg/mL
Use in combination with these reagents:
  • Detection Reagent: Human Clusterin Antibody (Catalog # MAB29372)
  • Standard: Recombinant Human Clusterin Protein, CF (Catalog # 2937-HS)
Please Note: Optimal dilutions of this antibody should be experimentally determined.

Formulation, Preparation, and Storage

Purification

Protein A or G purified from hybridoma culture supernatant

Reconstitution

Reconstitute at 0.5 mg/mL in sterile PBS.

Reconstitution Buffer Available:
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Formulation

Lyophilized from a 0.2 μm filtered solution in PBS with BSA as a carrier protein.

Shipping

The product is shipped at ambient temperature. Upon receipt, store it immediately at the temperature recommended below.

Stability & Storage

Use a manual defrost freezer and avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles.
  • 12 months from date of receipt, -20 to -70 °C as supplied.
  • 1 month, 2 to 8 °C under sterile conditions after reconstitution.
  • 6 months, -20 to -70 °C under sterile conditions after reconstitution.

Background: Clusterin

Clusterin, also known as Apolipoprotein J, Sulfated Glycoprotein 2 (SGP-2), TRPM-2, and SP-40,40, is a secreted multifunctional protein that was named for its ability to induce cellular clustering. It binds a wide range of molecules and may function as a chaperone of misfolded extracellular proteins. It also participates in the control of cell proliferation, apoptosis, and carcinogenesis (1, 2). Clusterin is predominantly expressed in adult testis, ovary, adrenal gland, liver, heart, and brain and in many epithelial tissues during embryonic development (3). Human Clusterin is synthesized as a precursor that contains two coiled coil domains, three nuclear localization signals (NLS), and one heparin binding domain (4‑6). Intracellular cleavages of the precursor remove the signal peptide and generate comparably sized alpha and beta chains which are secreted as an 80 kDa N-glycosylated disulfide-linked heterodimer (7, 8). Mature human Clusterin shares 77% amino acid sequence identity with mouse and rat Clusterin. High μg/mL concentrations of Clusterin circulate predominantly as a component of high density lipoprotein particles, and these are internalized and degraded through interactions with LRP-2/Megalin (9, 10). In human, an alternately spliced 50 kDa isoform of Clusterin (nCLU) lacks the signal peptide and remains intracellular (5, 11). This molecule is neither glycosylated nor cleaved into alpha and beta chains (11). In the cytoplasm, nCLU destabilizes the actin cytoskeleton and inhibits NF kappaB activation (12, 13). Cellular exposure to ionizing radiation promotes the translocation of nCLU to the nucleus where it interacts with Ku70 and promotes apoptosis (5, 11). This function contrasts with the cytoprotective effect of secreted Clusterin (14). During colon cancer tumor progression there is a down‑regulation of the intracellular form and an up‑regulation of the glycosylated secreted form (11).

References

  1. Carver, J.A. et al. (2003) IUBMB Life 55:661.
  2. Shannan, B. et al. (2006) Cell Death Differ. 13:12.
  3. French, L.E. et al. (1993) J. Cell Biol. 122:1119.
  4. Kirszbaum, L. et al. (1989) EMBO J. 8:711.
  5. Leskov, K.S. et al. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278:11590.
  6. Pankhurst, G.J. et al. (1998) Biochemistry 37:4823.
  7. Burkey, B.F. et al. (1991) J. Lipid. Res. 32:1039.
  8. de Silva, H.V. et al. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265:14292.
  9. Jenne, D.E. et al. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. 266:11030.
  10. Kounnas, M.Z. et al. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270:13070.
  11. Pucci, S. et al. (2004) Oncogene 23:2298.
  12. Moretti, R. M. et al. (2007) Cancer Res. 67:10325.
  13. Santilli, G. et al. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278:38214.
  14. Trougakos, I.P. et al. (2004) Cancer Res. 64:1834.

Alternate Names

APOJ, CLI, CLU, SGP-2, SP-40, TRPM-2

Entrez Gene IDs

1191 (Human); 12759 (Mouse)

Gene Symbol

CLU

UniProt

Additional Clusterin Products

Product Documents for Human Clusterin Biotinylated Antibody

Certificate of Analysis

To download a Certificate of Analysis, please enter a lot number in the search box below.

Note: Certificate of Analysis not available for kit components.

Product Specific Notices for Human Clusterin Biotinylated Antibody

For research use only

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