ICAM1 elisa kit product blog
Tags: ELISA Kit; Intercellular Adhesion Molecule 1; ICAM1; ICAM1 elisa kit; Dog ELISA Kit;
The Dog ICAM1 icam1 (Catalog #MBS2882062) is an ELISA Kit and is intended for research purposes only. The product is available for immediate purchase. The MBS2882062 ELISA Kit recognizes Dog ICAM1.The ICAM1 icam1 product has the following accession number(s) (GI #2506778) (NCBI Accession #P33729.2) (Uniprot Accession #P33729). Researchers may be interested in using Bioinformatics databases such as those available at The National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) website for more information about accession numbers and the proteins they represent. Even researchers unfamiliar with bioinformatics databases will find the NCBI databases to be quite user friendly and useful.
To buy or view more detailed product information and pricing, please click on the technical datasheet page below:
(Or you can also download the PDF Manual for complete product instructions).
Please refer to the product datasheet for known applications of a given elisa kit. We\'ve tested the Dog Intercellular adhesion molecule 1 ELISA Kit with the following immunoassay(s):
Typical Testing Data/Standard Curve (for reference only)
Detection Range: 0.78-50 ng/mL. Dog Intercellular adhesion molecule 1 ELISA Kit or ELISA (enzyme-linked immunosorbant assays) Kits in general, are a valuable research tool for a myriad of applications in a range of scientific settings. Currently, three major types of ELISA formats are used by researchers: sandwich, competitive and indirect. Most commercially available ELISA Kits are sandwich or competitive. Commercially available ELISA Kits contain wells that have been pre-coated with the capture antibody. Please refer to the product manual for the ELISA format of your specific kit. ICAM1 also interacts with the following gene(s): CD44, GBP1, IRF1, IRF3, ITGAL, ITGAM, ITGB2, NCAM1, STAT1, VCAM1. Artery, Female Genital, Kidney, Liver, Lymphoreticular, Pancreas, Testis, Uncharacterized Tissue tissues are correlated with this protein. The following patways have been known to be associated with this gene.