You are here: Products\Immunoassays\Resistin Mouse ELISA:

Resistin Mouse ELISA

Other names: Cysteine-rich secreted protein FIZZ3, Adipose tissue-specific secretory factor, ADSF, C/EBP-epsilon-regulated myeloid-specific secreted cysteine-rich protein, Cysteine-rich secreted protein A12-alpha-like 2, RETN, FIZZ3, HXCP1, RSTN, UNQ407/PRO1199 Product of BioVendor
Product: Size:
CS069 (regulatory status: RUO) 96 wells (1 kit)
Files: Datasheet PDF (RUO) Resistin on pubmed

Product details


Summary

Resistin, a product of the RSTN gene, is a peptide hormone belonging to the class of cysteine-rich secreted proteins which is termed the RELM family, and is also described as ADSF (Adipose Tissue-Specific Secretory Factor) and FIZZ3 (Found in Inflammatory Zone). Human resistin contains 108 amino acids as a prepeptide, and its hydrofobic signal peptide is cleaved before its secretion. Resistin circulates in human blood as a dimeric protein consisting of two 92 amino acid polypeptides, which are disulfide-linked via Cys26. Resistin may be an important link between obesity and insulin resistance. Mouse resistin, specifically produced and secreted by adipocyte, acts on skeletal muscle myocytes, hepatocytes and adipocytes themselves so that it reduces their sensitivity to insulin. Steppan et al. have suggested that resistin suppresses the ability of insulin to stimulace glucose uptake. They have also suggested that resistin is present at elevated levels in blood of obese mice, and is down regulated by fasting and antidiabetic drugs. Way et al., on the other hand, have found that resistin expression is severly suppressed in obesity and is stimulated by several antidiabetic drugs. Other studies have shown that mouse resistin increases during the differentiation of adipocytes, but it also seems to inhibit adipogenesis. In contrast, the human adipogenic differentiation is likely to be associated with a down regulation of resistin gene expression. Recent studies have shown that human resistin is expressed also in macrophages and may be a novel link between inflammation and insulin resistance.

Features

  • It is intended for research use only.
  • The total assay time is less than 4 hours.
  • The kit measures mouse resistin in serum, plasma (EDTA, citrate) and tissue culture medium.
  • Assay format is 96 wells.
  • Quality Control is mouse serum based.
  • Standard is recombinant protein based.
  • Components of the kit are provided ready to use, concentrated or lyophilized.

Research topic

Animal studies, Energy metabolism and body weight regulation


Assay format

Sandwich ELISA, Biotin-labelled antibody

Applications

Cell culture medium, Plasma-Citrate, Plasma-EDTA, Serum

Sample requirements

1 µl/well

Storage/Shipping

Store the kit at 2–8°C. Under these conditions, the kit is stable until the expiration date (see label on the box).

Calibration Curve

Calibration range

2 – 100 ng/ml

Limit of detection

5 pg/ml

Intra-assay (Within-Run, n=8)

CV = 4.6 %

Inter-assay (Run-to-Run, n=8)

CV = 5.5 %

Spiking Recovery

100 %

Dilution Linearity

103 %

Cross-Reactivity

human No signal
bovine No signal
cat No signal
chicken Not tested
dog No signal
goat No signal
hamster Yes
horse No signal
monkey No signal
mouse Yes
pig No signal
rabbit No signal
rat No signal
sheep No signal

References to this product

  • Arteel GE, Joshi-Barve S, Kaiser JP, von Montfort C, Guo L, Beier JI. New role of resistin in lipopolysaccharide-induced liver damage in mice. J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2008 Jun;325 (3):801-8
  • Burnett MS, Lee CW, Kinnaird TD, Stabile E, Durrani S, Dullum MK, Devaney JM, Fishman C, Stamou S, Canos D, Zbinden S, Clavijo LC, Jang GJ, Andrews JA, Zhu J, Epstein SE. The potential role of resistin in atherogenesis. Atherosclerosis . Oct;182(2):241-8 (2005)
  • Haluzik MM, Lacinova Z, Dolinkova M, Haluzikova D, Housa D, Horinek A, Vernerova Z, Kumstyrova T, Haluzik M. Improvement of insulin sensitivity after peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha agonist treatment is accompanied by paradoxical increase of circulating resistin levels. Endocrinology . Sep;147(9):4517-24 (2006)
  • Kiank C, Schuett C, Volker U, Geffers R, Domanska G, Fusch G, Depke M. Hypermetabolic syndrome as a consequence of repeated psychological stress in mice. Endocrinology. 2008 Jun;149 (6):2714-23
  • Kurlawalla-Martinez Cm Stiles B, Wang Y, Devaskar SU, Kahn BB, Wu H. Insulin hypersensitivity and resistance to streptozotocin-induced diabetes in mice lacking PTEN in adipose tissue. Mol Cell Biol . Mar;25(6):2498-510 (2005)

References to summary

  • Steppan C.M., Lazar M.A.: The current biology of resistin. Journal of Internal Medicine. 255, 439–447, (2004).
  • Maebuchi M, Machidori M, Urade R, Ogawa T, Moriyama T: Low resistin levels in adipose tissues and serum high-fat fed mice and genetically obese mice: development of an ELISA system for quantification of resistin. Archiv Biochem Biophys. 416, 164–170, (2003)
  • Steppan C.M., Lazar M.A.: Resistin and obesity-associated insulin resistance. TRENDS in Endocrinology and Metabolism. 13 (1), 18–23, (2002)
  • Pravenec M, Kazdová L, Landa V, Zídek V, Mlejnek P, Jansa P, Wang J, Qi N, Kurtz TW: Transgenic and recombinant resistin impair skeletal muscle glucose metabolism in the spontaneously hypertensive rat. J Biol Chem. 278, 45209–45215, (2001)
  • Banerjee R.R., Lazar M.A.: Dimerization of resistin and resistin–like moleules is determined by a single cystein. The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 276, 25970–25973, (2001)
  • Kim KH. et al.: A Cysteine-rich Adipose Tissue-specific Secretory Factors Inhibits Adipocte Differentiation. The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 276 (14), 11252–11256, (2001)
  • Steppan C.M. et al.: The Hormone Links Obesity to Diabetes. Nature. 409, 307–312, (2001)
  • Way J.M. et al.: Adipose Tissue Resistin Expression Is Severly Suppressed in Obesity and Stimulated by Peroxisome Proliferator-activated Receptor g Agonists. The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 276 (28), 25651–25653, (2001)
  • Hartman H.B., Lazar M.A. at al.: Mechanisms Regulating Adipocyte Expression of Resistin. The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 277 (22), 19754–19761, (2002)
  • Fasshauer M. at al.: Tumor Necrosis Factor a Is a Negative Regulator of Resistin Gene Expression and Secretion in 3T3-L1 Adipocytes. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications. 208, 1027–1031, (2001)
  • Steppan C.M. at al.: A Family of Tissue-specific Resistin-like Molecules. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 98 (2), 502–506, (2001)
  • Juan CC. at al.: Suppressed Gene Expression of Adipocyte Resistin in an Insulin-resistant Rat Model Probably by Elevated Free Fatty Acids. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications. 289, 1328–1333, (2001)

Registration form



Shopping cart

Your cart is empty.