Catalog: | C-FC-3403A |
Product Type: | FCM Antibody |
Size: | 50 µL/100 µL/200 µL |
Reactivity: | Human |
Specificity: | Human M-CSF |
Analysis mode: | FCM |
Host: | Mouse |
Clonality: | Monoclonal |
Isotype: | IgG1 |
Alternate names: | colony stimulating factor 1 (macrophage) |
Form: | Liquid |
Shipping: | This antibody is shipped as liquid solution at ambient temperature. Upon receipt, store it immediately at the temperature recommended below. |
Storage: | This antibody can be stored at 2℃-8℃ for one month without detectable loss of activity. Antibody products are stable for twelve months from date of receipt when stored at -20℃ to -80℃. Preservative-Free. Avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles. |
Purification method: | Protein A |
Conjugation: | Unconjugated |
Immunogen: | Recombinant Human M-CSF / CSF-1 Protein |
Buffer: | 0.2 μm filtered solution in PBS |
Macrophage colony-stimulating factor 1, also known as CSF-1, M-CSF, Lanimostim and CSF1, is a single-pass membrane protein which is disulfide-linked as a homodimer or heterodimer. Granulocyte / macrophage colony-stimulating factors are cytokines that act in hematopoiesis by controlling the production, differentiation, and function of 2 related white cell populations of the blood, the granulocytes and the monocytes-macrophages. M-CSF/CSF-1 is known to facilitate monocyte survival, monocyte-to-macrophage conversion, and macrophage proliferation. M-CSF/CSF-1 is a secreted cytokine which influences hemopoietic stem cells to differentiate into macrophages or other related cell types. It binds to the Colony stimulating factor 1 receptor. M-CSF/CSF-1 may also be involved in development of the placenta. The active form of M-CSF/CSF-1 is found extracellularly as a disulfide-linked homodimer, and is thought to be produced by proteolytic cleavage of membrane-bound precursors. M-CSF/CSF-1 induces cells of the monocyte/macrophage lineage. It also plays a role in immunological defenses, bone metabolism, lipoproteins clearance, fertility and pregnancy. Upregulation of M-CSF/CSF-1 in the infarcted myocardium may have an active role in healing not only through its effects on cells of monocyte/macrophage lineage, but also by regulating endothelial cell chemokine expression.
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