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Anti-Fibrin, clone 59D8, Cat. No. MABS2155, is a mouse monoclonal antibody that detects fibrin and has been tested for use in Immunofluorescence, Immunohistochemistry, Peptide Inhibition Assay, Radioimmunoassay, and Western Blotting.
More>>Anti-Fibrin, clone 59D8, Cat. No. MABS2155, is a mouse monoclonal antibody that detects fibrin and has been tested for use in Immunofluorescence, Immunohistochemistry, Peptide Inhibition Assay, Radioimmunoassay, and Western Blotting. Less<<
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Übersicht
Replacement Information
Description
Catalogue Number
MABS2155-25UG
Description
Anti-Fibrin Antibody, clone 59D8
Alternate Names
Fibrinogen beta chain
Background Information
Fibrinogen beta chain (UniProt: P02675) is encoded by the FGB gene (Gene ID: 2244) in human. Fibrinogen beta chain is synthesized with a signal peptide (aa 1-30), which is subsequently cleaved off to product the mature protein that is further cleaved by thrombin to produce fibrinopeptide B (aa 31-44) and fibrinogen beta chain (45-491). Conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin is triggered by thrombin, which cleaves fibrinopeptides A and B from alpha and beta chains, and thus exposes the N-terminal polymerization sites responsible for the formation of the soft clot. The soft clot is converted into the hard clot by factor XIIIA which catalyzes the epsilon-(gamma-glutamyl)lysine cross-linking between gamma chains (stronger) and between alpha chains (weaker) of different monomers. Fibrin monomers spontaneously aggregate into an insoluble gel, which is then covalently stabilized by Factor XIIIa. Fibrin is shown to retain about 98% of the original covalent structure of fibrinogen. Fibrin clot can be broken down by plasmin by cleave between residues 152-153 and 163-164. This monoclonal antibody (clone 59D8) binds to fibrin even in the presence of human fibrinogen at the concentration found in plasma. (Ref.: Hui, KY., et al. (1983). Science. 222 (4628); 1129-1132).
References
Product Information
Format
Purified
Presentation
Purified mouse monoclonal antibody IgG1 in buffer containing 0.1 M Tris-Glycine (pH 7.4), 150 mM NaCl with 0.05% sodium azide.
Applications
Application
Anti-Fibrin, clone 59D8, Cat. No. MABS2155, is a mouse monoclonal antibody that detects fibrin and has been tested for use in Immunofluorescence, Immunohistochemistry, Peptide Inhibition Assay, Radioimmunoassay, and Western Blotting.
Key Applications
Immunofluorescence
Immunohistochemistry
Peptide Inhibition Assay
Radioimmunoassay
Western Blotting
Application Notes
Western Blotting Analysis: 1 µg/mL from a representative lot detected Fibrin in human liver tissue lysates.
Immunofluorescence Analysis: A representative lot detected Fibrin in Immunofluorescence applicaitons (Thalji, N.K., et. al. (2016). Nat Med. 22(8):924-32; Lin, L., et. al. (2015). J Biol Chem. 290(39); 23543-52).
Immunohistochemistry (Paraffin) Analysis: A 1:250 dilution from a representative lot detected Fibrin in human placenta and human kidney tissue sections.
Radioimmunoassay Analysis: A representative lot detected Fibrin in Radioimmunoassay applicaitons (Hui, K.Y., et. al. (1983). Science. 222(4628):1129-32).
Immunohistochemistry Analysis: A representative lot detected Fibrin in Immunohistochemistry applicaitons (Cortes-Canteli, M., et. al. (2015). Neurobiol Aging. 36(2):608-17).
Peptide Inhibition Assay:: Binding of a representative lot of this antibody to human fibrin was inhibited in the presence of fibrin-like peptides. (Hui, K.Y., et. al. (1983). Science. 222(4628);1129-32).
Western Blotting Analysis (WB): A represnetative lot of this antibody detected Fibrin in Western Blotting applications (Kopec, AK., et al (2017). J Hepatol. 66(4):787-797; Cortes-Canteli, M., et al (2015). Neurobiol. Aging. 36(2);608-617)
Biological Information
Immunogen
KLH-conjugated synthetic heptapeptide (GHRPLDK) derived from the N-terminal region of the beta chain of human fibrinogen.
Clone
59D8
Concentration
Please refer to lot specific datasheet.
Host
Mouse
Specificity
Clone 59D8 is a mouse monoclonal antibody that specifically detects human and murine fibrin. It targets an epitope within a heptapeptide fom the N-terminal region of the beta chain.
~55 kDa observed; 55.93 kDa calculated. Uncharacterized bands may be observed in some lysate(s).
Physicochemical Information
Dimensions
Materials Information
Toxicological Information
Safety Information according to GHS
Safety Information
Product Usage Statements
Quality Assurance
Evaluated by Western Blotting in mouse liver tissue lysate.
Western Blotting Analysis: 1 µg/mL of this antibody detected Fibrin in mouse liver tissue lysates.
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.
Direct inhibitors of coagulation factor Xa (FXa) or thrombin are promising oral anticoagulants that are becoming widely adopted. The ability to reverse their anticoagulant effects is important when serious bleeding occurs or urgent medical procedures are needed. Here, using experimental mouse models of hemostasis, we show that a variant coagulation factor, FXa(I16L), rapidly restores hemostasis in the presence of the anticoagulant effects of these inhibitors. The ability of FXa(I16L) to reverse the anticoagulant effects of FXa inhibitor depends, at least in part, on the ability of the active site inhibitor to hinder antithrombin-dependent FXa inactivation, paradoxically allowing uninhibited FXa to persist in plasma. Because of its inherent catalytic activity, FXa(I16L) is more potent (by >50-fold) in the hemostasis models tested than a noncatalytic antidote that is currently in clinical development. FXa(I16L) also reduces the anticoagulant-associated bleeding in vivo that is induced by the thrombin inhibitor dabigatran. FXa(I16L) may be able to fill an important unmet clinical need for a rapid, pro-hemostatic agent to reverse the effects of several new anticoagulants.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia and has no effective treatment. Besides the well-known pathologic characteristics, this disease also has a vascular component, and substantial evidence shows increased thrombosis as well as a critical role for fibrin(ogen) in AD. This molecule has been implicated in neuroinflammation, neurovascular damage, blood-brain barrier permeability, vascular amyloid deposition, and memory deficits that are observed in AD. Here, we present evidence demonstrating that fibrin deposition increases in the AD brain and correlates with the degree of pathology. Moreover, we show that fibrin(ogen) is present in areas of dystrophic neurites and that a modest decrease in fibrinogen levels improves neuronal health and ameliorates amyloid pathology in the subiculum of AD mice. Our results further characterize the important role of fibrin(ogen) in this disease and support the design of therapeutic strategies aimed at blocking the interaction between fibrinogen and amyloid-β (Aβ) and/or normalizing the increased thrombosis present in AD.
Quercetin-3-rutinoside inhibits thrombus formation in a mouse model by inhibiting extracellular protein disulfide isomerase (PDI), an enzyme required for platelet thrombus formation and fibrin generation. Prior studies have identified PDI as a potential target for novel antithrombotic agents. Using a fluorescence enhancement-based assay and isothermal calorimetry, we show that quercetin-3-rutinoside directly binds to the b' domain of PDI with a 1:1 stoichiometry. The binding of quercetin-3-rutinoside to PDI induces a more compact conformation and restricts the conformational flexibility of PDI, as revealed by small angle x-ray scattering. The binding sites of quercetin-3-rutinoside to PDI were determined by studying its interaction with isolated fragments of PDI. Quercetin-3-rutinoside binds to the b'x domain of PDI. The infusion of the b'x fragment of PDI rescued thrombus formation that was inhibited by quercetin-3-rutinoside in a mouse thrombosis model. This b'x fragment does not possess reductase activity and, in the absence of quercetin-3-rutinoside, does not affect thrombus formation in vivo. The isolated b' domain of PDI has potential as an antidote to reverse the antithrombotic effect of quercetin-3-rutinoside by binding and neutralizing quercetin-3-rutinoside.
Monoclonal antibodies to a synthetic fibrin-like peptide bind to human fibrin but not fibrinogen. Hui, KY; Haber, E; Matsueda, GR Science
223
1129-33
1983
A synthetic heptapeptide from the amino terminus of the beta chain in human fibrin was used as an antigen to produce monoclonal antibodies that bind to fibrin even in the presence of human fibrinogen at the concentration found in plasma. As expected, the antifibrin activity was inhibited by the peptide antigen but not by a control heptapeptide. In a chicken ex vivo circulatory model for fibrin detection, intravenously administered monoclonal antibodies bound to human fibrin-coated disks placed in an extracorporeal chamber. These findings may lead to better methods for identifying deep vein and coronary artery thrombi.