JAM-A, Human, mAb M.Ab.F11 from MyBioSource.com

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JAM-A, Human, mAb M.Ab.F11

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MyBioSource.com's JAM-A, Human, mAb M.Ab.F11 is a Human monoclonal antibody. The JAM-A, Human, mAb M.Ab.F11 Antibody was generated using F11R, JAM, JAM1, and JAMA as the antigen. It reacts with Human. This antibody has been shown to work in applications such as: ELISA, Flow Cytometry, Functional Assay, Immunofluorescence, Immunohistochemistry, Immunohistochemistry - fixed, Immunoprecipitation, and Western Blot.

Description

Product Description: The monoclonal antibody M.Ab.F11 recognizes junctional adhesion molecule-A (JAM-A) also known as the human platelet F11-Receptor (F11R) or JAM-1. JAM-A is a surface glycoprotein duplex (32 and 35 kDa) belongingto the immunoglobulin superfamily found on the surface of human platelets and at intercellular junctions of endothelial cells and epithelial cells. JAM-A belongs together with JAM-C (JAM-2) and JAM-B (VE-JAM or JAM-3) to a family of adhesion proteins with a V-C2 immunoglobulin domain organization. JAM-A plays an important role in tight junctions where it is involved in cell-to-cell adhesion through homophilic interactions. It co-distributes with other tight junction components such as ZO-1, 7H6 antigen, cingulin and occludin. Moreover, JAM-A plays a role in platelet aggregation, secretion, adhesion, spreading.
In the platelet, JAM-A is a membrane protein involved in 2 distinct processes initiated on the platelet surface. Namely, antibody-induced platelet aggregation and secretion both dependent on FcgammaRII and GPIIb/IIIa integrin, a process that may be involved in pathophysiological processes associated with certain thrombocytopenias and secondly, antibody mediated platelet adhesion independent from FcgammaRII or- fibrinogen receptor that appears to play a role in physiological processes associated with platelet adhesion and aggregation. A physiological role for the JAM-A protein was demonstrated by its phosphorylation after the stimulation of platelets by thrombin and collagen. A pathophysiological role for the JAM-A was revealed by demonstrating the presence of JAM-A antibodies in patients with thrombocytopenia. Adhesion of platelets through JAM-A resulted in events characteristic of the action of cell adhesion molecules. Recent data suggests a role for JAM-A in the adhesion of platelets to cytokine-inflamed endothelial cells and thus in thrombosis and atherosclerosis induced in non-denuded blood vessels by inflammatory processes