| Host: | Mouse | 
| Applications: | ELISA | 
| 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-IgM is suitable for use in ELISA research applications. | 
| Clonality : | Monoclonal | 
| Clone ID : | 7408 | 
| Conjugation: | Unconjugated | 
| Isotype: | IgG1 | 
| Formulation: | 37 mM citrate, 125 mM phosphate, pH 6.0, 0.9 % NaCI, 0.095 % NaN3 as a preservative | 
| Purification: | Purity accurate to greater than or equal to 95% | 
| Concentration: | 5.0 mg/ml (+/-10 %) | 
| Storage Instruction: | 36 months from manufacturing at 2°C. Temperature analysis:-70 °C, 21 days N/D-20 °C, 21 days OK +4 °C, 21 days OK +30 °C, 21 OK +35 °C, 21 days OK +45 °C, 7 days OK. Shelf life stability testing at 2–8 °C in the product buffer. | 
| Association Rate Constant: | 8.9 x 105 1/Ms | 
| Determination Method: | SPR analysis (ProteOn XPR36) | 
| Immunoreactivity: | 80–120 % compared to the reference sample in an FIA test | 
| Immunogen: | human immunoglobulin M | 
| Background | Immunoglobulin M (IgM) is a basic antibody that is present on B cells. It is the first antibody to appear in response to initial exposure to antigen. IgM forms polymers where multiple immunoglobulins are covalently linked together with disulfide bonds, mostly as a pentamer. Demonstrating IgM antibodies in a patient s serum indicates recent infection, or in a neonate s serum indicates intrauterine infection (e.g. congenital rubella). | 
Information sourced from Uniprot.org
                    
                
