Human Resistin (ADSF) Rapid ELISA Kit from MyBioSource.com

Supplier Page

Supplier Page from
MyBioSource.com for
Human Resistin (ADSF) Rapid ELISA Kit

Get Pricing

Description

This Human Resistin (ADSF) Rapid ELISA Kit is intended is a fast ELISA kit, this assay takes less than 1.5 hours to detect Human Resistin/RETN with <3pg/ml sensitivity. format: 96-well plate with removable strips. Compatible samples: cell culture supernates, cell lysates, serum and plasma (heparin, EDTA). This is a TMB colorimetric sandwich ELISA kit with short assay time and fast experiment set up. Resistin/RETN tissue specificity: Expressed only in fatty tissues. Strip well format. Reagents for up to 96 tests.
This human Resistin ELISA Kit was based on standard sandwich enzyme-linked immune-sorbent assay technology. A monoclonal antibody from mouse specific for Resistin has been precoated onto 96-well plates. Standards (E Coli, K19-P108) and test samples are added to the wells, a biotinylated detection polyclonal antibody from goat specific for Resistin is added subsequently and then followed by washing with PBS or TBS buffer. Avidin-Biotin-Peroxidase Complex was added and unbound conjugates were washed away with PBS or TBS buffer. HRP substrate TMB was used to visualize HRP enzymatic reaction. TMB was catalyzed by HRP to produce a blue color product that changed into yellow after adding acidic stop solution. The density of yellow is proportional to the human Resistin amount of sample captured in plate.
The capture antibody is monoclonal antibody from mouse, the detection antibody is polyclonal antibody from goat. Expression system for standard: Resistin is an adipose-derived hormone postulated to link adiposity to insulin resistance.1 Type 2 diabetes, characterized by target-tissue resistance to insulin, is epidemic in industrialized societies and is strongly associated with obesity. Adipocytes secrete a unique signalling molecule, which called resistin (for resistance to insulin), that may be the hormone potentially links obesity to diabetes.2 Resistin is overexpressed in human adipose tissue of obese individuals and is likely to modulate insulin sensitivity. Resistin is, therefore, a candidate gene for insulin resistance.3 The standard product used in this kit is human Resistin with the molecular mass of 51-53KDa. The detected Resistin includes zymogen and active enzyme