ELISA kit for Ovalbumin (OVA)

Catalog number
E4358-100
Name
ELISA kit for Ovalbumin (OVA)
Size
100 reactions
Price
838.00 EUR
Supplier

Details

Product type
Set of reagents for ELISA
Detection and sensitivity
Detection Range: 0.781 – 50 ng/ml Sensitivity: < 0.469 ng/ml
Performance and applications
This kit is intended to be used for determination of the concentration of Ovalbumin in human serum, plasma, tissue homogenates and other biological fluids.This kit works with the following samples: Serum, plasma, tissue homogenates and other biological fluids.
Additional iinformation
More specifications for the product ELISA kit for Ovalbumin (OVA) are presented in the user manual. Please, contact our techical support team at info@gentaur.com to ask for the latest version of the protocol.
Shipping handling and storage
The product should be shipped on gel packages.The optimal temperature for storage of this kit is 4°CExpiration date: 6 months
Properties
E05 478 566 350 170 or Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assays,E05 478 566 350 170 or Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assays
Test
ELISA Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays Code 90320007 SNOMED
Gene
Ovalbumin (abbreviated OVA) is the main protein found in egg white, making up 60-65% of the total protein. Ovalbumin displays sequence and three-dimensional homology to the serpin superfamily, but unlike most serpins it is not a serine protease inhibitor. The function of ovalbumin is unknown, although it is presumed to be a storage protein. OVA is also the best characterized and the first antigen proteins used as a transgene to make transgenic mice. Many different transgenic mouse models have systemic OVA expression driven by the ubiquitously expressed b-actin promoter or tissue-specific OVA expression with insulin promoter to drive the transgene expression, for studying type I diabetes, or in different isoforms, secreted or cell-membrane associated, and more recently as inducible transgene models. These C57BL/6 mice, BALB/c mice models are well characterized, and have contributed to our understanding of immunogenicity and tolerance by the OVA model.