Spécifications
- Cdt:96 Tests
- Durée du test:Multiple steps
- Type de test:Sandwich
- Format:Pre-coated
- Primary antibody reactivity:Human
- Cible:GCLM
- Désignation:Human GCLM ELISA kit
- Type déchantillon:Serum, plasma, tissue homogenates and other biological fluids
- Réactivité croisée:Human GCLM ELISA kit exhibits high specificity and excellent specificity for the detection of human GCLM. No significant cross-reactivity or interference between GCLM and analogues was observed.
- Méthode de détection:Colorimetric
- Time to Results:4 h 30 min
- Principe du test:Quantitative
- Durée de conservation:Store for 6 months at 4 °C
- Portée de détection:0,156 - 10 ng/ml
- Température de stockage:4 °C
- Volume d'échantillon:100 μl
- Sensibilité:0,094 ng/ml
- Regulatory status:RUO
Spécifications
À propos de cet article
Human GCLM ELISA kit is a sandwich Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (sELISA) designed for the in vitro quantitative determination of human GCLM in serum, plasma, tissue homogenates, and other biological fluids.
- Ready to use ELISA kit
- Detection range: 0,156 to 10 ng/ml
- Sensitivity: 0,094 ng/ml
- Sample type: Serum, plasma, tissue homogenates and other biological fluids
- Assay precision: Intra assay: CV <8%, Inter assay: CV <10%
Human GCLM employs the sandwich enzyme immunoassay technique for the quantitative measurement of human GCLM in serum, plasma, tissue homogenates, and other biological fluids. An antibody specific for GCLM has been pre-coated onto a 96-well microtiter plate. The standards and test samples are added into the wells and the GCLM present in each sample is bound to the wells by the immobilised antibody. Following incubation, the wells are washed and then incubated with Biotinylated Anti-GCLM Antibody, which binds the captured GCLM present in each well. Following incubation, unbound biotinylated detection antibody is removed by washing, and an HRP-Streptavidin conjugate is added to the wells and the microtiter plate is incubated. Following incubation and washing, TMB substrate solution is then used to visualise the HRP enzymatic reaction by catalysis to produce a blue-coloured product that changes to yellow after addition of acidic stop solution. The density of yellow is proportional to the amount of GCLM captured in each well. The concentration of GCLM can then be calculated by reading the O.D. absorbance at 450 nm in a microplate reader and referring to the standard curve.