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Invitrogen™ Goat anti-Mouse IgM (Heavy chain) Cross-Adsorbed Secondary Antibody, Alexa Fluor™ 488
Description
To minimize cross-reactivity, these goat anti-mouse IgM whole secondary antibodies have been affinity purified and cross-adsorbed against human IgG1, IgG2, IgG3, IgG4, IgA, human serum, and purified human paraproteins prior to conjugation. Cross-adsorption or pre-adsorption is a purification step to increase specificity of the antibody resulting in higher sensitivity and less background staining. The secondary antibody solution is passed through a column matrix containing immobilized serum proteins from potentially cross-reactive species. Only the nonspecific-binding secondary antibodies are captured in the column, and the highly specific secondaries flow through. The benefits of this extra step are apparent in multiplexing/multicolor-staining experiments (e.g., flow cytometry) where there is potential cross-reactivity with other primary antibodies or in tissue/cell fluorescent staining experiments where there are may be the presence of endogenous immunoglobulins. Alexa Fluor dyes are among the most trusted fluorescent dyes available today. Invitrogen™ Alexa Fluor 488 dye is a bright, green-fluorescent dye with excitation ideally suited to the 488 nm laser line. For stable signal generation in imaging and flow cytometry, Alexa Fluor 488 dye is pH-insensitive over a wide molar range. Probes with high fluorescence quantum yield and high photostability allow detection of low-abundance biological structures with great sensitivity. Alexa Fluor 488 dye molecules can be att...
Specifications
Specifications
| Antigen | Mouse IgM (Heavy chain) Cross-Adsorbed |
| Applications | Immunohistochemistry, Immunocytochemistry |
| Classification | Polyclonal |
| Concentration | 2 mg/mL |
| Conjugate | Alexa Fluor 488 |
| Formulation | PBS with 5mM sodium azide; pH 7.5 |
| Host Species | Goat |
| Immunogen | Mouse Mu immunoglobulin. |
| Purification Method | Purified |
| Quantity | 500 μg |
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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Not likely. With any secondary antibody, you need to consider what other isotypes and species they are cross-adsorbed against. If it is cross-adsorbed against other species or specific chains, cross-reactivity should be minimal or none. Our goat anti-IgM secondary antibodies have been cross-adsorbed against IgG and therefore should exhibit minimal binding to IgG.