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Anti-Alpaca IgG(H+L), AlpHcAbs® Goat antibody(HRP) plus

Details and Advantages
Applications: WB,IHC,ELISA
Reactivity: Alpaca IgG(H+L)
Conjugate: HRP
Advantages:

High lot-to-lot consistency

Increased sensitivity and higher affinity

Summary >

Description:
Anti-Alpaca IgG(H+L), AlpHcAbs® Goat antibody(HRP) plus is designed for detecting Alpaca IgG(H+L) specifically. Based on immunoelectrophoresis and/or ELISA, Anti-Alpaca IgG(H+L), AlpHcAbs® Goat antibody(HRP) plus reacts with Alpaca IgG heavy chain and light chain selectively.

Immunogen: Alpaca (Vicugna pacos) immunoglobulins                  
Host: Goat
Isotype: Goat IgG
Conjugate:  HRP
Specificity: Alpaca IgG(H+L)
Cross-Reactivity: No Cross-reactivity to human, rabbit, macaque mouse, rat, sheep, goat and guinea pig IgG
Purity: Affinity purified
Concentration: 1mg/ml
Formation: Liquid, 10mM PBS(pH 7.5), 0.05% sucrose, 0.1% trehalose, 0.01% proclin300, 50% glycerol
Storage: Store at –20 °C(Avoid freeze / thaw cycles), Protect from light, Stable for 12 months at -20°C

Background:
The biological family Camelidae comprises camels (one-humped Camelus dromedarius and two-humped Camelus bactrianus), llama (Lama glama and Lama guanicoe), and vicugna (Vicugna vicugna and Vicugna pacos). Camelidae contain two kinds of IgG in serum: conventional antibodies (IgG1) containing two light chains and two heavy chains (composed of the VH, CH1, hinge, and CH2 and CH3 domains) and two types of homodimeric heavy-chain antibodies (HCAbs), IgG2 and IgG3, which comprise only H chains; each H chain contains a VHH, hinge, and CH2 and CH3 domains. The smallest intact functional antigen-binding fragment of HCAbs is the single-domain VHH, also known as a nanobody(Nb). Alpaca is also called Vicugna pacos. Alpaca IgG contains IgG1a, IgG1b, IgG2b, IgG2c and IgG3.

Performance >

WB:                 1:5000-1:50000
ELISA:              1:10000-1:50000
IHC:                 1:200 - 1:5000
IHC-Paraffin:   1:200-1:5000

Dilution factors are presented in the form of a range because the optimal dilution is a function of many factors, such as antigen density, permeability, etc. The actual dilution used must be determined empirically.