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Read our guarantee »Products:Cardiovascular >> Blood >> Blood Cell Antigens >> RBC Antigens
Anti-Hemoglobin antibody [Haem1]
See all Hemoglobin products (17) ...
Mouse monoclonal [Haem1] to Hemoglobin
hHb - 100% hAlbumin - <0.01% hHaptoglobin - 0.4% hMyoglobin - <0.03% hTransferrin - <0.01% Cross-reactivity values have been calculated on weight/weight basis. They can vary because of the presence of antigen or related impurities in protein preparations used for cross reactivity assays. Affinity constant: 1x1010 l/mol human haemoglobin.
RIA, ELISAmore details
Reacts with
Human
Full length native protein (purified) (Human).
Liquid
Store at +4°C.
Preservative: 0.095% Sodium Azide
Constituents: 37mM Sodium citrate, 125mM PBS, pH 6.0
Concentration information loading...
Protein A purified
Monoclonal
Haem1
unknown
IgG1
unknown
Cardiovascular >> Blood >> Other
Cardiovascular >> Blood >> Blood Cell Antigens >> RBC Antigens
Our Abpromise guarantee covers the use of ab401 in the following tested applications.
The application notes include recommended starting dilutions; optimal dilutions/concentrations should be determined by the end user.
RIA: Use at an assay dependent dilution.
ELISA: Use at an assay dependent dilution.
Involved in oxygen transport from the lung to the various peripheral tissues.
Red blood cells.
Defects in HBA1/HBA2 may be a cause of Heinz body anemias (HEIBAN) [MIM:140700]. This is a form of non-spherocytic hemolytic anemia of Dacie type 1. After splenectomy, which has little benefit, basophilic inclusions called Heinz bodies are demonstrable in the erythrocytes. Before splenectomy, diffuse or punctate basophilia may be evident. Most of these cases are probably instances of hemoglobinopathy. The hemoglobin demonstrates heat lability. Heinz bodies are observed also with the Ivemark syndrome (asplenia with cardiovascular anomalies) and with glutathione peroxidase deficiency.
Defects in HBA1/HBA2 are the cause of alpha-thalassemia (A-THAL) [MIM:604131]. The thalassemias are the most common monogenic diseases and occur mostly in Mediterranean and Southeast Asian populations. The hallmark of alpha-thalassemia is an imbalance in globin-chain production in the adult HbA molecule. The level of alpha chain production can range from none to very nearly normal levels. Deletion of both copies of each of the two alpha-globin genes causes alpha(0)-thalassemia, also known as homozygous alpha thalassemia. Due to the complete absence of alpha chains, the predominant fetal hemoglobin is a tetramer of gamma-chains (Bart hemoglobin) that has essentially no oxygen carrying capacity. This causes oxygen starvation in the fetal tissues leading to prenatal lethality or early neonatal death. The loss of three alpha genes results in high levels of a tetramer of four beta chains (hemoglobin H), causing a severe and life-threatening anemia known as hemoglobin H disease. Untreated, most patients die in childhood or early adolescence. The loss of two alpha genes results in mild alpha-thalassemia, also known as heterozygous alpha-thalassemia. Affected individuals have small red cells and a mild anemia (microcytosis). If three of the four alpha-globin genes are functional, individuals are completely asymptomatic. Some rare forms of alpha-thalassemia are due to point mutations (non-deletional alpha-thalassemia). The thalassemic phenotype is due to unstable globin alpha chains that are rapidly catabolized prior to formation of the alpha-beta heterotetramers.
Note=Alpha(0)-thalassemia is associated with non-immune hydrops fetalis, a generalized edema of the fetus with fluid accumulation in the body cavities due to non-immune causes. Non-immune hydrops fetalis is not a diagnosis in itself but a symptom, a feature of many genetic disorders, and the end-stage of a wide variety of disorders.
Belongs to the globin family.
The initiator Met is not cleaved in variant Thionville and is acetylated.
Target information above from: UniProt accessionP69905
The UniProt Consortium
The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt) in 2010
Nucleic Acids Res. 38:D142-D148 (2010).
ab401 has not yet been referenced specifically in any publications.
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