| Long name: |
FITC Conjugated, DPYD Polyclonal Antibody |
| Category: |
Conjugated Primary Antibodies |
| Conjugation: |
Anti-FITC Antibody |
| Host Organism: |
Rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) |
| Target Antigen: |
DPYD |
| Specificity: |
This is a highly specific antibody against DPYD |
| Modification: |
Unmodified |
| Modification site: |
None |
| Clonality: |
Polyclonal |
| Clone: |
Polyclonal antibody |
| Concentration: |
1ug per 1ul |
| Source: |
KLH conjugated synthetic peptide derived from human DPYD |
| Gene ID number: |
1806 |
| Tested applications: |
IF(IHC-P) |
| Recommended dilutions: |
IF(IHC-P)(1:50-200) |
| Crossreactivity: |
Mouse, Rat, Human |
| Crossreactive species details: |
not every possible cross-reactivity is known, Due to limited amount of testing and knowledge |
| Antigen background: |
Abnormal concentrations of these metabolites in bodily fluids may be the cause of neurological disease and a contraindication for treatment of cancer patients with certain pyrimidine analogs, DPYD also catalyzes the anticancer agent 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) pathway and is involved in the efficacy and toxicity of 5-FU, DPYD deficiency is a disease characterized by persistent urinary excretion of excessive amounts of uracil, Deficient DPYD alleles may constitute a risk factor for severe toxicity following treatment with 5-FU, Leukopenia, Patients suffering from this disease show a severe reaction to the anticancer drug 5-fluorouracil, Specifically, This reaction includes stomatitis, Variations in DPYD concentration may arise from alterations at the transcriptional level of the dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase gene, a deficiency of DPYD leads to an accumulation of uracil and thymine, also known as hereditary thymine-uraciluria or familial pyrimidinemia, and neurologic symptoms, cerebellar ataxia, diarrhea, fever, hair loss, hypermethylation of the DPYD promoter downregulates dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase expression, marked weight loss, progressing to semicoma, thrombocytopenia, thus, thymine and 5-hydroxymethyluracil, Dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPYD) catalyzes the first rate-limiting step of the NADPH-dependent catabolism of uracil and thymine to dihydrouracil and dihydrothymine, Involvement in disease:Defects in DPYD are the cause of dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase deficiency (DPYD deficiency) |
| Purification method: |
This antibody was purified via Protein A |
| Storage conditions: |
50% glycerol and 0, Store refrigerated at 2 to 8 degrees Celcius for up to 1 year, 09% sodium azide, Keep the antibody in an aqueous buffered solution containing 1% BSA |
| Excitation Emission: |
494nm/518nm |
| Synonyms: |
DPD |
| Properties: |
Bioss Primary Conjugated Antibodies FITC is highly sensitive to pH extremes, FITC has a green emission that's usually collected at 530 nanometers, FITC has a high quantum yield (efficiency of energy transfer from absorption to emission fluorescence) and approximately half of the absorbed photons are emitted as fluorescent light, For fluorescent microscopy applications, This Bioss Primary Conjugated Antibodies Fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) antibody is currently after some BD antibodies the most commonly used fluorescent dye for FACS, When excited at 488 nanometers, its photo bleaching effects are not observed due to a very brief interaction at the laser intercept, the 1 FITC is seldom used as it photo bleaches rather quickly though in flow cytometry applications, the FL1 detector of a FACSCalibur or FACScan, C, C for long term storage and for short term at + 5°, If you buy Antibodies supplied by Bioss Primary Conjugated Antibodies they should be stored frozen at - 24° |
| Gene target: |
DPYD Conjugated |
| Short name: |
FITC Conjugated, DPYD Antibody |
| Technique: |
Fluorescein, antibodies against human proteins, antibodies for, antibody Conjugates, Antibody |
| Label: |
FITC |
| Alternative name: |
fluorecein coupled, DPYD (Antibody to) |
| Alternative technique: |
antibodies |
| Identity: |
3012 |
| Gene: |
DPYD |
More about : DPYD |
| Long gene name: |
dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase |
| Locus: |
1p21, 3 |
| Discovery year: |
1994-07-07 |
| GenBank acession: |
U20938 |
| Entrez gene record: |
1806 |
| Pubmed identfication: |
7713523 |
| RefSeq identity: |
NM_000110 |
| Havana BLAST/BLAT: |
OTTHUMG00000039683 |
| Locus Specific Databases: |
UMD Locus Specific Databases LRG_722 |