Wenn Sie das Fenster schließen, wird Ihre Konfiguration nicht gespeichert, es sei denn, Sie haben Ihren Artikel in die Bestellung aufgenommen oder zu Ihren Favoriten hinzugefügt.
Klicken Sie auf OK, um das MILLIPLEX® MAP-Tool zu schließen oder auf Abbrechen, um zu Ihrer Auswahl zurückzukehren.
Wählen Sie konfigurierbare Panels & Premixed-Kits - ODER - Kits für die zelluläre Signaltransduktion & MAPmates™
Konfigurieren Sie Ihre MILLIPLEX® MAP-Kits und lassen sich den Preis anzeigen.
Konfigurierbare Panels & Premixed-Kits
Unser breites Angebot enthält Multiplex-Panels, für die Sie die Analyten auswählen können, die am besten für Ihre Anwendung geeignet sind. Unter einem separaten Register können Sie das Premixed-Cytokin-Format oder ein Singleplex-Kit wählen.
Kits für die zelluläre Signaltransduktion & MAPmates™
Wählen Sie gebrauchsfertige Kits zur Erforschung gesamter Signalwege oder Prozesse. Oder konfigurieren Sie Ihre eigenen Kits mit Singleplex MAPmates™.
Die folgenden MAPmates™ sollten nicht zusammen analysiert werden: -MAPmates™, die einen unterschiedlichen Assaypuffer erfordern. -Phosphospezifische und MAPmate™ Gesamtkombinationen wie Gesamt-GSK3β und Gesamt-GSK3β (Ser 9). -PanTyr und locusspezifische MAPmates™, z.B. Phospho-EGF-Rezeptor und Phospho-STAT1 (Tyr701). -Mehr als 1 Phospho-MAPmate™ für ein einziges Target (Akt, STAT3). -GAPDH und β-Tubulin können nicht mit Kits oder MAPmates™, die panTyr enthalten, analysiert werden.
.
Bestellnummer
Bestellinformationen
St./Pkg.
Liste
Dieser Artikel wurde zu Ihren Favoriten hinzugefügt.
Wählen Sie bitte Spezies, Panelart, Kit oder Probenart
Um Ihr MILLIPLEX® MAP-Kit zu konfigurieren, wählen Sie zunächst eine Spezies, eine Panelart und/oder ein Kit.
Custom Premix Selecting "Custom Premix" option means that all of the beads you have chosen will be premixed in manufacturing before the kit is sent to you.
Catalogue Number
Ordering Description
Qty/Pack
List
Dieser Artikel wurde zu Ihren Favoriten hinzugefügt.
Spezies
Panelart
Gewähltes Kit
Menge
Bestellnummer
Bestellinformationen
St./Pkg.
Listenpreis
96-Well Plate
Menge
Bestellnummer
Bestellinformationen
St./Pkg.
Listenpreis
Weitere Reagenzien hinzufügen (MAPmates erfordern die Verwendung eines Puffer- und Detektionskits)
Menge
Bestellnummer
Bestellinformationen
St./Pkg.
Listenpreis
48-602MAG
Buffer Detection Kit for Magnetic Beads
1 Kit
Platzsparende Option Kunden, die mehrere Kits kaufen, können ihre Multiplex-Assaykomponenten in Kunststoffbeuteln anstelle von Packungen erhalten, um eine kompaktere Lagerung zu ermöglichen.
Dieser Artikel wurde zu Ihren Favoriten hinzugefügt.
Das Produkt wurde in Ihre Bestellung aufgenommen
Sie können nun ein weiteres Kit konfigurieren, ein Premixed-Kit wählen, zur Kasse gehen oder das Bestell-Tool schließen.
AP193C
Sigma-AldrichDonkey Anti-Guinea Pig IgG Antibody, Cy3 conjugate, Species Adsorbed
Detect Donkey Guinea Pig IgG using this Donkey anti-Guinea Pig IgG Antibody, Cy3 conjugate, Species Adsorbed validated for use in IF.
More>>Detect Donkey Guinea Pig IgG using this Donkey anti-Guinea Pig IgG Antibody, Cy3 conjugate, Species Adsorbed validated for use in IF. Less<<
SDB (Sicherheitsdatenblätter), Analysenzertifikate und Qualitätszertifikate, Dossiers, Broschüren und andere verfügbare Dokumente.
Detect Donkey Guinea Pig IgG using this Donkey anti-Guinea Pig IgG Antibody, Cy3 conjugate, Species Adsorbed validated for use in IF.
Key Applications
Immunofluorescence
Biological Information
Host
Donkey
Species Reactivity
Guinea Pig
Antibody Type
Polyclonal Antibody
Physicochemical Information
Dimensions
Materials Information
Toxicological Information
Safety Information according to GHS
Safety Information
Product Usage Statements
Usage Statement
Unless otherwise stated in our catalog or other company documentation accompanying the product(s), our products are intended for research use only and are not to be used for any other purpose, which includes but is not limited to, unauthorized commercial uses, in vitro diagnostic uses, ex vivo or in vivo therapeutic uses or any type of consumption or application to humans or animals.
Storage and Shipping Information
Packaging Information
Material Size
500 µg
Transport Information
Supplemental Information
Specifications
Global Trade Item Number
Bestellnummer
GTIN
AP193C
04053252319440
Documentation
Donkey Anti-Guinea Pig IgG Antibody, Cy3 conjugate, Species Adsorbed SDB
Nitric oxide signaling modulates synaptic inhibition in the superior paraolivary nucleus (SPN) via cGMP-dependent suppression of KCC2. Yassin, L; Radtke-Schuller, S; Asraf, H; Grothe, B; Hershfinkel, M; Forsythe, ID; Kopp-Scheinpflug, C Frontiers in neural circuits
8
65
2014
Glycinergic inhibition plays a central role in the auditory brainstem circuitries involved in sound localization and in the encoding of temporal action potential firing patterns. Modulation of this inhibition has the potential to fine-tune information processing in these networks. Here we show that nitric oxide (NO) signaling in the auditory brainstem (where activity-dependent generation of NO is documented) modulates the strength of inhibition by changing the chloride equilibrium potential. Recent evidence demonstrates that large inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs) in neurons of the superior paraolivary nucleus (SPN) are enhanced by a very low intracellular chloride concentration, generated by the neuronal potassium chloride co-transporter (KCC2) expressed in the postsynaptic neurons. Our data show that modulation by NO caused a 15 mV depolarizing shift of the IPSC reversal potential, reducing the strength of inhibition in SPN neurons, without changing the threshold for action potential firing. Regulating inhibitory strength, through cGMP-dependent changes in the efficacy of KCC2 in the target neuron provides a postsynaptic mechanism for rapidly controlling the inhibitory drive, without altering the timing or pattern of the afferent spike train. Therefore, this NO-mediated suppression of KCC2 can modulate inhibition in one target nucleus (SPN), without influencing inhibitory strength of other target nuclei (MSO, LSO) even though they are each receiving collaterals from the same afferent nucleus (a projection from the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body, MNTB).
Non-epithelial stem cells and cortical interneuron production in the human ganglionic eminences. Hansen, DV; Lui, JH; Flandin, P; Yoshikawa, K; Rubenstein, JL; Alvarez-Buylla, A; Kriegstein, AR Nature neuroscience
16
1576-87
2013
GABAergic cortical interneurons underlie the complexity of neural circuits and are particularly numerous and diverse in humans. In rodents, cortical interneurons originate in the subpallial ganglionic eminences, but their developmental origins in humans are controversial. We characterized the developing human ganglionic eminences and found that the subventricular zone (SVZ) expanded massively during the early second trimester, becoming densely populated with neural stem cells and intermediate progenitor cells. In contrast with the cortex, most stem cells in the ganglionic eminence SVZ did not maintain radial fibers or orientation. The medial ganglionic eminence exhibited unique patterns of progenitor cell organization and clustering, and markers revealed that the caudal ganglionic eminence generated a greater proportion of cortical interneurons in humans than in rodents. On the basis of labeling of newborn neurons in slice culture and mapping of proliferating interneuron progenitors, we conclude that the vast majority of human cortical interneurons are produced in the ganglionic eminences, including an enormous contribution from non-epithelial SVZ stem cells.
Gender-specific perturbations in modulatory inputs to motoneurons in a mouse model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. L R Herron,G B Miles Neuroscience
226
2011
The fatal neurodegenerative disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is characterised by loss of motoneurons of the brainstem and spinal cord, and corticospinal neurons of the motor cortex. There is also increasing evidence of involvement of glial cells and interneurons, with non-cell autonomous disease mechanisms now thought to contribute to motoneuron degeneration in ALS. Given the apparent involvement of altered motoneuron excitability in ALS and the recent demonstration that motoneuron excitability is controlled by C-boutons, a specific class of synaptic input recently shown to originate from a small cluster of spinal interneurons, we hypothesised that perturbations in C-bouton inputs to motoneurons may contribute to altered excitability and the eventual degeneration of motoneurons in ALS. To begin to assess this we performed a detailed, developmental study of the anatomy of C-boutons in a mouse model of ALS (G93A SOD1 mutant). We found that C-bouton number is unchanged in ALS mice compared to wildtype littermates at any age. In contrast, we found that the size of C-boutons increases in ALS mice between postnatal day (P)8 and P30, with boutons remaining larger throughout symptomatic stages (P120-P140). Interestingly, we found that C-boutons are only enlarged in male mice. We found no evidence of concomitant changes in clusters of postsynaptic proteins known to align with C-boutons (Kv2.1 K(+) channels and m(2)-type muscarinic receptors). In conclusion, these data support the involvement of pre-symptomatic changes in C-bouton anatomy in ALS pathogenesis and in particular mechanisms underlying the male bias of this disease.
An essential role for RAX homeoprotein and NOTCH-HES signaling in Otx2 expression in embryonic retinal photoreceptor cell fate determination. Muranishi, Y; Terada, K; Inoue, T; Katoh, K; Tsujii, T; Sanuki, R; Kurokawa, D; Aizawa, S; Tamaki, Y; Furukawa, T The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
31
16792-807
2010
The molecular mechanisms underlying cell fate determination from common progenitors in the vertebrate CNS remain elusive. We previously reported that the OTX2 homeoprotein regulates retinal photoreceptor cell fate determination. While Otx2 transactivation is a pivotal process for photoreceptor cell fate determination, its transactivation mechanism in the retina is unknown. Here, we identified an evolutionarily conserved Otx2 enhancer of ∼500 bp, named embryonic enhancer locus for photoreceptor Otx2 transcription (EELPOT), which can recapitulate initial Otx2 expression in the embryonic mouse retina. We found that the RAX homeoprotein interacts with EELPOT to transactivate Otx2, mainly in the final cell cycle of retinal progenitors. Conditional inactivation of Rax results in downregulation of Otx2 expression in vivo. We also showed that NOTCH-HES signaling negatively regulates EELPOT to suppress Otx2 expression. These results suggest that the integrated activity of cell-intrinsic and -extrinsic factors on EELPOT underlies the molecular basis of photoreceptor cell fate determination in the embryonic retina.
Production and histological application of affinity-purified antibodies to heat-denatured green fluorescent protein. Nakamura, KC; Kameda, H; Koshimizu, Y; Yanagawa, Y; Kaneko, T The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society
56
647-57
2008
Enhanced green fluorescent protein (GFP) irreversibly loses not only fluorescence but also antigenicity recognized with conventional anti-GFP antibodies by heat denaturation. This hinders combinatory applications of the GFP immunodetection technique with heat-requiring procedures, such as in situ hybridization histochemistry, antigen retrieval, and Western blot. Here we produced new rabbit and guinea pig antibodies against heat-denatured GFP. The polyclonal antibodies affinity-purified with the antigen column detected a single band corresponding to the molecular size of GFP in Western blot analysis, with mouse brain expressing GFP from the GAD67 locus. By immunofluorescence labeling, the new antibodies detected GFP molecules in heat (greater than or = 70 degrees C)-treated sections but not in untreated sections of the mouse brain. When the sections were incubated at greater than or = 37 degrees C with in situ hybridization buffer containing 50% formamide, a denaturing reagent, the sections lost immunoreactivity with the conventional anti-GFP antibodies but acquired immunoreactivity with the new antibodies to heat-denatured GFP. Finally, GFP immunofluorescence was successfully visualized with the new antibodies in sections of the GFP-expressing mice labeled by fluorescence in situ hybridization histochemistry against GAD67 mRNA. Thus, the antibodies produced in this study may provide an opportunity to combine GFP immunodetection with procedures requiring heat treatment. This manuscript contains online supplemental material at http://www.jhc.org. Please visit this article online to view these materials.