Human Thyroid Stimulating Hormone ELISA Kit (TSH) (ab100660)
Key features and details
- Sensitivity: 4 pg/ml
- Range: 2.744 pg/ml - 2000 pg/ml
- Sample type: Cell culture supernatant, Plasma, Serum
- Detection method: Colorimetric
- Assay type: Sandwich (quantitative)
- Reacts with: Human
Properties
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Storage instructions
Store at -20°C. Please refer to protocols. -
Components 1 x 96 tests 200X HRP-Streptavidin Concentrate 1 x 200µl 20X Wash Buffer Concentrate 1 x 25ml 5X Assay Diluent B 1 x 15ml Assay Diluent A 1 x 30ml Biotinylated anti-Human TSH 2 vials Recombinant Human TSH Standard (lyophilized) 2 vials Stop Solution 1 x 8ml TMB One-Step Substrate Reagent 1 x 12ml TSH Microplate (12 x 8 wells) 1 unit -
Research areas
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Relevance
Thyroid stimulating hormone, also known as thyrotropin, is secreted from cells in the anterior pituitary called thyrotrophs, finds its receptors on epithelial cells in the thyroid gland, and stimulates that gland to synthesize and release thyroid hormones. TSH is a glycoprotein hormone composed of two subunits which are non covalently bound to one another. The alpha subunit of TSH is also present in two other pituitary glycoprotein hormones, follicle stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone, and, in primates, in the placental hormone chorionic gonadotropin. Each of these hormones also has a unique beta subunit, which provides receptor specificity. In other words, TSH is composed of alpha subunit bound to the TSH beta subunit, and TSH associates only with its own receptor. Free alpha and beta subunits have essentially no biological activity. -
Cellular localization
Secreted -
Alternative names
- Anterior pituitary glycoprotein hormones common subunit alpha
- CG ALPHA
- CGA
see all -
Database links
- Entrez Gene: 1081 Human
- Omim: 118850 Human
- SwissProt: P01215 Human