Recombinant Thyroglobulin (Thyroidal Cell Marker) Antibody, Clone: [MSVA-189R], Rabbit, Monoclonal

Catalog Number: NBT-7038-RBM16-P1
Article Name: Recombinant Thyroglobulin (Thyroidal Cell Marker) Antibody, Clone: [MSVA-189R], Rabbit, Monoclonal
Biozol Catalog Number: NBT-7038-RBM16-P1
Supplier Catalog Number: 7038-RBM16-P1
Alternative Catalog Number: NBT-7038-RBM16-P1-100
Manufacturer: NeoBiotechnologies
Host: Rabbit
Category: Antikörper
Application: IHC
Species Reactivity: Human
Immunogen: Recombinant full-length human Thyroglobulin protein
Alternative Names: AITD3, hTG, TDH3, Tg, Tgn
Thyroglobulin is a 660kDa dimeric pre-protein with mutiple glycosylation sites. It is produced by and processed within the thyroid gland to produce the hormone thyroxine and triiodothyronine. Prior to forming dimers, thyroglobulin monomers undergo conformational maturation in the endoplasmic reticulation. The vast majority of follicular carcinomas of the thyroid will give positive immunoreactivity for anti-thyroglobulin even though sometimes only focally. Poorly differentiated carcinomas of the thyroid are frequently anti-thyroglobulin negative. Adenocarcinomas of other-than-thyroid origin do not react with this antibody. This antibody is useful in identification of thyroid carcinoma of the papillary and follicular types. Presence of thyroglobulin in metastatic lesions establishes the thyroid origin of tumor. Anti-thyroglobulin, combined with anti-calcitonin, can identify medullary carcinomas of the thyroid. Furthermore, anti-thyroglobulin, combined with anti-TTF1, can be a reliable marker to differentiate between primary thyroid and lung neoplasms.
Clonality: Monoclonal
Clone Designation: [MSVA-189R]
Molecular Weight: 660kDa (Dimeric Form)
NCBI: 7038
UniProt: P01266
Form: Ab produced in CHO cell mammalian-based expression system. Prepared in 10mM PBS with 0.05% BSA & 0.05% azide. Also available WITHOUT BSA & azide.
Rabbit Recombinant Monoclonal Antibody (MSVA-189R) tested on many normal and cancer tissues. The immunohistochemistry staining in these tissues aligns with the expression data in Human Protein Atlas.