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Anti-M13 Antibody (PE)

  • Product Information
  • Description
Catalog: C-FC-3400A
Product Type: FCM Antibody
Size: 25 Tests/100 Tests
Concentration: 10 μl/Test, 0.1 mg/ml
Reactivity: other
Specificity: other M13
Analysis mode: FCM
Host: Mouse
Clonality: Monoclonal
Isotype: IgG1
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 twelve months without detectable loss of activity. Protected from prolonged exposure to light. Do not freeze !
Purification method: Protein A
Conjugation: PE
Immunogen: M13 Bacteriophage
Buffer: Aqueous solution containing 0.5% BSA and 0.03%ProClin300

M13 is a filamentous bacteriophage composed of circular single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) which is 647 nucleotides long encapsulated in approximately 27 copies of the major coat protein P8 and capped with 5 copies of two different minor coat proteins (P9, P6, P3) on the ends. Infection with filamentous phages is not lethal, however, the infection causes turbid plaques in E. coli. It is a non-lytic virus. However, a decrease in the rate of cell growth is seen in the infected cells. M13 plasmids are used for many recombinant DNA processes, and the virus has also been studied for its uses in nanostructures and nanotechnology. The phage coat is primarily assembled from a 5 amino acid protein called pVIII (or p8), which is encoded by gene VIII (or g8) in the phage genome. For a wild type M13 particle, it takes about approximately 27 copies of p8 to make the coat about 9 nm long. The coat's dimensions are flexible though and the number of p8 copies adjusts to accommodate the size of the single-stranded genome it packages. The general stages to a viral life cycle are infection, replication of the viral genome, assembly of new viral particles, and then release of the progeny particles from the host. Filamentous phage uses a bacterial structure known as the F pilus to infect E. coli, with the M13 p3 tip contacting the TolA protein on the bacterial pilus. The phage genome is then transferred to the cytoplasm of the bacterial cell where resident proteins convert the single-stranded DNA genome to a double-stranded replicative form.

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