STAT6 Antibody | V4052-20UG

(No reviews yet) Write a Review
SKU:
800-V4052-20UG
Size:
20 ug
€649.00
Frequently bought together:

Description

STAT6 Antibody | V4052-20UG | Gentaur US, UK & Europe Disrtribition

Family: Primary antibody

Formulation: 0.2 mg/ml in 1X PBS with 0.1 mg/ml BSA (US sourced), 0.05% sodium azide

Format: Purified

Clone: STAT6/7163R

Host: Rabbit

Clonality: Recombinant Rabbit Monoclonal

Isotype: Rabbit IgG, kappa

Species Reactivity: Human

Application: IHC-P

Application Details: Immunohistochemistry (FFPE): 1-2ug/ml

Application Note: Optimal dilution of the recombinant STAT6 antibody should be determined by the researcher.

Purity: Protein A/G affinity

Description: STAT6 is a transcription factor in the Jak/STAT signal transduction pathway responsible for mediating IL-4 immune signaling. STAT6 was recently suggested to be a reliable marker to distinguish solitary fibrous tumors from other soft tissue neoplasms. Gene fusions are common in solitary fibrous tumors. Recent next generation sequencing studies demonstrated the presence of a NAB2-STAT6 fusion, formed by an intrachromosomal inversion fusing two neighboring genes on chromosome 12q13, in 55-100% of solitary fibrous tumors, regardless of tumor morphology or anatomical site. By immunohistochemistry, nuclear STAT6 expression can discriminate solitary fibrous tumors from its morphological mimics in the meninges, including meningioma, glioblastoma, gliosarcoma, haemangioblastoma, schwannoma and haemangioma. A recent study by Cheah, et al. using the rabbit monoclonal STAT6 antibody (Clone YE361) observed expression in all solitary fibrous tumors (54/54) tested, regardless of histology, anatomical site or CD34 status. Morphological mimics of solitary fibrous tumors were negative, demonstrating 100% specificity.

Immunogen: Recombinant full-length human protein was used as the immunogen for the recombinant STAT6 antibody.

Storage: Aliquot the recombinant STAT6 antibody and store frozen at -20 °C or colder. Avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles.

Localization: Cytoplasm, nucleus

View AllClose