Bio-Connect

Thomsen-Friedenreich Antigen Antibody / CD176

Research Use Only
ORB640099
Biorbyt
ApplicationsImmunoHistoChemistry, ImmunoHistoChemistry Paraffin
Product group Antibodies
ReactivityHuman
Price on request
Packing Size
Large volume orders?
Order with a bulk request

Overview

  • Supplier
    Biorbyt
  • Product Name
    Thomsen-Friedenreich Antigen Antibody / CD176
  • Delivery Days Customer
    16
  • Application Supplier Note
    Optimal dilution of the antibody should be determined by the researcher.
  • Applications
    ImmunoHistoChemistry, ImmunoHistoChemistry Paraffin
  • Applications Supplier
    Immunohistochemistry (FFPE): 1-2ug/ml IHC-P
  • Certification
    Research Use Only
  • Clonality
    Monoclonal
  • Clone ID
    A78-G/A7
  • Conjugate
    Unconjugated
  • Host
    Mouse
  • Isotype
    IgM
  • Scientific Description
    Recognizes a disaccharide epitope, Gal 1-3GalNAc, of Thomsen-Friedenreich (TF) antigen. It is specific for both anomeric forms of the disaccharide (TF and TF , including related structures on the glycolipid) and shows no cross-reactivity with sialylated glycophorin. The Thomsen-Friedenreich antigen acts as an oncofetal antigen, with low expression in normal adult tissues but increasing to fetal levels of expression in hyperplasia or malignancy. It is considered as a pan-carcinoma marker. This MAb is capable to agglutinate desialylated red blood cells. During metastasis, the ability of malignant cells to form multicellular aggregates via homotypic or heterotypic aggregation and their adhesion to the endothelium are critical. The tumor-associated carbohydrate Thomsen-Friedenreich antigen (Gal-GalNAc) is involved in tumor cell adhesion and tissue invasion. It also causes an immune response, and overexpression of the antigen causes cancer cells to be more sensitive to natural killer cell lysis. The Thomsen-Friedenreich antigen is suppressed in normal healthy cells and represents one of the few chemically well-defined antigens associated with tumor malignancy. The presence of the Thomsen-Friedenreich antigen on the surface of cancer cells may result from a divergence from the normal pathway for O-linked glycosylation in these cells, most likely caused by inappropriate localization of the enzymes involved in synthesis of the disaccharide.
  • Reactivity
    Human
  • Storage Instruction
    -20°C,2°C to 8°C
  • UNSPSC
    12352203