• Human transplanted kidney stained with anti-C3d antibody using peroxidase-conjugate and DAB chromogen. Note basement membrane staining of renal tubules and glomeruli.

Anti-C3d antibody (Full length) [ZM369] (STJ180489)

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STJ180489

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Host: Mouse
Applications: IHC-P
Reactivity: Human
Note: STRICTLY FOR FURTHER SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH USE ONLY (RUO). MUST NOT TO BE USED IN DIAGNOSTIC OR THERAPEUTIC APPLICATIONS.
Short Description: Mouse monoclonal antibody anti-C3d (Full length) is suitable for use in Immunohistochemistry research applications.
Clonality: Monoclonal
Clone ID: ZM369
Conjugation: Unconjugated
Isotype: IgG2b/Kappa
Formulation: Tris-HCI buffer containing stabilizing protein (BSA) and <0.1% ProClin
Purification: Affinity purified
Dilution Range: 1:100-200
Storage Instruction: Store at 2‐8°C for up to 24 months. Predilute: Ready to use, no reconstitution necessary. Concentrate: Use dilution range and appropriate lab‐standardized diluent. Stability after dilution: 7 days at 24°C, 3 months at 2‐8°C, 6months at ‐20°C.
Immunogen Region: Full length
Specificity: Positive control: Acute rejected kidney transplant
Immunogen: Recombinant full-length human Complement C3 protein
Background Complement component C3 plays a central role in the activation of complement system. Its activation is required for both classical and alternative complement activation pathways. C3d deposition in the renal transplant PTCs (peritubular capillaries) is indicative of AR (acute rejection) with subsequent high probability of graft loss. Anti-C3d, combined with anti-C4d, can be utilized as a tool for diagnosis of AR and warrant prompt and aggressive anti-rejection treatment. It was shown that anti-C3d labeled the epidermal basement membrane in 97% cases of bullous pemphigoid, with none of the normal controls demonstrating such findings. 27% cases of pemphigus vulgaris demonstrate intercellular C3d deposition. Therefore, C3d immunohistochemistry is a helpful adjunct in the diagnosis of bullous pemphigoid (and perhaps pemphigus vulgaris) , especially in the cases in which only formalin-fixed, paraffin embedded tissue is available for analysis.

Information sourced from Uniprot.org

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