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Monocyte Chemotactic Protein-1 Human ELISA

  • Regulatory status:RUO
  • Type:Sandwich ELISA, HRP-labelled antibody
  • Other names:MCP-1, CCL2, C-C motif chemokine 2, MCAF
  • Species:Human
Cat. No. Size Price


RAF081R 96 wells (1 kit) $721,83
PubMed Product Details
Technical Data

Type

Sandwich ELISA, HRP-labelled antibody

Applications

Serum, Plasma-EDTA, Plasma-Heparin, Cell culture supernatant

Sample Requirements

20 µl/well

Shipping

At ambient temperature. Upon receipt, store the product at the temperature recommended below.

Storage/Expiration

Store the complete 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

15.6–1000 pg/ml

Limit of Detection

2.3 pg/ml

Intra-assay (Within-Run)

CV = 4.7%

Inter-assay (Run-to-Run)

CV = 8.7%

Spiking Recovery

92,00%

Dilution Linearity

105,00%

Summary

Research topic

Cytokines and chemokines and related molecules, Energy metabolism and body weight regulation

Summary

Monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1) is a member of the C-C family of chemokines. Chemokines are mediators that share the capacity to induce directional migration of leukocytes. MCP-1 is a chemoattractant for many cell types such as monocytes, neutrophils, hepatic stellate cells, granulocytes and T lymphocytes. MCP-1 is believed to play a role in a variety of pathological conditions, including inflammatory and immune reactions, atherosclerosis and neoplasia. Monocyte Chemotactic Protein-1 (MCP-1) is also known as Monocyte Chemotactic Activating Factor (MCAF) or CCL2.

Product References (2)

References

  • Fort-Gallifa I, García-Heredia A, Hernández-Aguilera A, Simó JM, Sepúlveda J, Martín-Paredero V, Camps J, Joven J. Biochemical indices of oxidative stress and inflammation in the evaluation of peripheral artery disease. Free Radic Biol Med. 2016 Aug;97:568-576. doi: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2016.07.011. Epub 2016 Jul 19. PubMed PMID: 27449545. See more on PubMed
  • Raftery EB, Carrageta MO. Hypertension and beta-blockers. Are they all the same?. Int J Cardiol. 1985 Apr;7(4):337-46. doi: 10.1016/0167-5273(85)90089-0. PubMed PMID: 2859251. See more on PubMed
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