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EPH receptor A1 (EPHA1) antibody

$245.00$585.00

Item Cat No.: 06014

Antibody: Rabbit EPH receptor A1 (EPHA1) Polyclonal Antibody

Concentration: 0.25 mg/ml purified IgG

Application: Validated by immunofluorescence labeling (1:100)

Reactivity: Human, mouse, rat

Anti-EPH receptor A1 (EPHA1) antibody is validated on mouse tissue and recommended for immunofluorescence labeling, IHC, or western blot of materials from rodent and human tissues.

Optional Blocking Peptide

FFPE Specific Antibody

FFPE-specific recognition antibodies are made against the same epitope sequence with novel cross-linking and stabilizing technique to lock the conformational state of epitope in a folded state similar to aldehyde induced fixation.

Western Blot Specific Antibody

Western blot-specific recognition antibodies are made against the same epitope sequence with novel denaturing and stabilizing technique to prevent the natural folding of epitope in order to lock its conformation in unfolded state.

Product price: $245.00
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Anti-EPH receptor A1 (EPHA1) antibody is validated on mouse tissue and recommended for immunofluorescence labeling, IHC, or western blot of materials from rodent and human tissues.

EPH receptor A1 (ephrin type-A receptor 1) is a membrane protein that is encoded by the EPHA1 gene in human. EPH receptor A1 belongs to the ephrin receptor subfamily of the protein-tyrosine kinase family. Receptors in the EPH subfamily typically have a single kinase domain and an extracellular region containing a Cys-rich domain and 2 fibronectin type III repeats. The ephrin receptors are divided into 2 groups, A and B, based on the similarity of their extracellular domain sequences and their respective affinities for binding ephrin-A and ephrin-B ligands.

Host/Isotype: Rabbit/IgG

Class: Polyclonal

Immunogen: Synthetic peptide (13-aa) derived from the C-terminal intracellular region of human EPH receptor A1 protein

Species homology of immunogen: Synthetic peptide sequence is identical to mouse or rat sequence

Conjugation: Unconjugated

Purification: Affinity chromatography

Storage buffer: PBS, pH 7.2, 0.1% sodium azide

Storage condition: –20°C


For Research Use Only. Not for use in clinical diagnostics.

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"I am really impressed with your approach. We tried multiple times previously to create monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies to claudin-2 and MLCK1. We have had limited success generating polyclonals and no success generating monoclonals. You have generated outstanding monoclonals to both. I look forward to continuing to work with you."

Jerrold R. Turner, M.D., Ph.D.

Brigham and Women’s Hospital | Harvard Medical School

"The polyclonal antibody you generated for KIAA0408 is stunning! KIAA0408 is a novel cilium molecule that has never been studied. So, clearly there will be a lot of demand for it as we have discovered a very interesting finding and the story will be published in a high impact journal. I am strongly inclined to generate monoclonal antibody for this protein too and we should think about patenting it."

Univ.-Prof. Jay Gopalakrishnan PhD

Heinrich-Heine-Universität | Universitätsklinikum Düsseldorf

"Your ARL13B antibody works beautifully!!! We’re so happy to have a cilia-specific antibody made in rat! I can send you high resolution images to be posted on your website."

Julie Craft Van De Weghe, PhD

School of Medicine | University of Washington

"The assay is a homophilic interaction mediated cell adhesion on purified protein (in this case, immobilized purified Pcdhga9 to Pcdhga9 expressed on cell surface). Compared to control, cell adhesion is reduced in the presence of Pcdhga9 monoclonal antibody supernatants!"

Divyesh Joshi, PhD

School of Medicine | Yale University

"The rabbit hybridoma supernatants of anti-APOBEC3 project are tested positive by ELISA, and we are very happy about it! We previously tried a company, Abclone. Their Project "A" has immune response that is <10,000 titer in antiserum, which would explain why there is no positive mAb after fusion. Their project "B" didn't have any immune response in rabbit."

Harshita B Gupta, PhD.

School of Medicine | UT Health San Antonio

"We have tested anti mouse T cell antiserum samples from both rabbits you sent to us.

They worked very well! Thank you!"

Victoria Gorbacheva, PhD.

School of Medicine | Cleveland Clinic

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