Mouse Apolipoprotein E ELISA Kit (ab215086)
Key features and details
- One-wash 90 minute protocol
- Sensitivity: 130 pg/ml
- Range: 312.5 pg/ml - 20000 pg/ml
- Sample type: Cit plasma, EDTA Plasma, Hep Plasma, Serum
- Detection method: Colorimetric
- Assay type: Sandwich (quantitative)
- Reacts with: Mouse
Overview
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Product name
Mouse Apolipoprotein E ELISA Kit
See all Apolipoprotein E kits -
Detection method
Colorimetric -
Precision
Intra-assay Sample n Mean SD CV% Serum 8 7.5% Inter-assay Sample n Mean SD CV% Serum 3 9% -
Sample type
Serum, Hep Plasma, EDTA Plasma, Cit plasma -
Assay type
Sandwich (quantitative) -
Sensitivity
130 pg/ml -
Range
312.5 pg/ml - 20000 pg/ml -
Recovery
Sample specific recovery Sample type Average % Range Serum 102 97% - 115% Hep Plasma 100 91% - 109% EDTA Plasma 89 80% - 102% Cit plasma 101 97% - 103% -
Assay time
1h 30m -
Assay duration
One step assay -
Species reactivity
Reacts with: Mouse
Does not react with: Cow -
Product overview
Mouse Apolipoprotein E ELISA Kit (ab215086) is a single-wash 90 min sandwich ELISA designed for the quantitative measurement of Apolipoprotein E protein in cit plasma, edta plasma, hep plasma, and serum. It uses our proprietary SimpleStep ELISA® technology. Quantitate Mouse Apolipoprotein E with 130 pg/ml sensitivity.
SimpleStep ELISA® technology employs capture antibodies conjugated to an affinity tag that is recognized by the monoclonal antibody used to coat our SimpleStep ELISA® plates. This approach to sandwich ELISA allows the formation of the antibody-analyte sandwich complex in a single step, significantly reducing assay time. See the SimpleStep ELISA® protocol summary in the image section for further details. Our SimpleStep ELISA® technology provides several benefits:
- Single-wash protocol reduces assay time to 90 minutes or less
- High sensitivity, specificity and reproducibility from superior antibodies
- Fully validated in biological samples
- 96-wells plate breakable into 12 x 8 wells stripsA 384-well SimpleStep ELISA® microplate (ab203359) is available to use as an alternative to the 96-well microplate provided with SimpleStep ELISA® kits.
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Notes
Apolipoprotein E is a glycoprotein synthesized mainly in the liver and the brain and is a component of most lipoproteins with the exception of low-density lipoproteins (LDL). Apolipoprotein E mediates the binding, internalization, and catabolism of lipoprotein particles. Additionally, it can serve as a ligand for the LDL (Apolipoprotein B/E) receptor and for the specific Apolipoprotein E receptor (chylomicron remnant) of hepatic tissues. Mouse Apolipoprotein E consists of an 18 amino acid (aa) signal peptide and a 293 aa mature chain. Human and rat Apolipoprotein E are 71% and 92% identical to mouse Apolipoprotein E, respectively.
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Platform
Pre-coated microplate (12 x 8 well strips)
Properties
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Storage instructions
Store at +4°C. Please refer to protocols. -
Components 1 x 96 tests 10X Wash Buffer PT (ab206977) 1 x 20ml Antibody Diluent 5BI 1 x 6ml 10X Mouse Apolipoprotein E Capture Antibody 1 x 600µl 10X Mouse Apolipoprotein E Detector Antibody 1 x 600µl Mouse Apolipoprotein E Lyophilized Recombinant Protein 2 vials Plate Seals 1 unit Sample Diluent NS (ab193972) 1 x 50ml SimpleStep Pre-Coated 96-Well Microplate (ab206978) 1 unit Stop Solution 1 x 12ml TMB Development Solution 1 x 12ml -
Research areas
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Function
Mediates the binding, internalization, and catabolism of lipoprotein particles. It can serve as a ligand for the LDL (apo B/E) receptor and for the specific apo-E receptor (chylomicron remnant) of hepatic tissues. -
Tissue specificity
Occurs in all lipoprotein fractions in plasma. It constitutes 10-20% of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) and 1-2% of high density lipoproteins (HDL). APOE is produced in most organs. Significant quantities are produced in liver, brain, spleen, lung, adrenal, ovary, kidney and muscle. -
Involvement in disease
Defects in APOE are a cause of hyperlipoproteinemia type 3 (HLPP3) [MIM:107741]; also known as familial dysbetalipoproteinemia. Individuals with HLPP3 are clinically characterized by xanthomas, yellowish lipid deposits in the palmar crease, or less specific on tendons and on elbows. The disorder rarely manifests before the third decade in men. In women, it is usually expressed only after the menopause. The vast majority of the patients are homozygous for APOE*2 alleles. More severe cases of HLPP3 have also been observed in individuals heterozygous for rare APOE variants. The influence of APOE on lipid levels is often suggested to have major implications for the risk of coronary artery disease (CAD). Individuals carrying the common APOE*4 variant are at higher risk of CAD.
Genetic variations in APOE are associated with Alzheimer disease type 2 (AD2) [MIM:104310]. It is a late-onset neurodegenerative disorder characterized by progressive dementia, loss of cognitive abilities, and deposition of fibrillar amyloid proteins as intraneuronal neurofibrillary tangles, extracellular amyloid plaques and vascular amyloid deposits. The major constituent of these plaques is the neurotoxic amyloid-beta-APP 40-42 peptide (s), derived proteolytically from the transmembrane precursor protein APP by sequential secretase processing. The cytotoxic C-terminal fragments (CTFs) and the caspase-cleaved products such as C31 derived from APP, are also implicated in neuronal death. Note=The APOE*4 allele is genetically associated with the common late onset familial and sporadic forms of Alzheimer disease. Risk for AD increased from 20% to 90% and mean age at onset decreased from 84 to 68 years with increasing number of APOE*4 alleles in 42 families with late onset AD. Thus APOE*4 gene dose is a major risk factor for late onset AD and, in these families, homozygosity for APOE*4 was virtually sufficient to cause AD by age 80. The mechanism by which APOE*4 participates in pathogenesis is not known.
Defects in APOE are a cause of sea-blue histiocyte disease (SBHD) [MIM:269600]; also known as sea-blue histiocytosis. This disorder is characterized by splenomegaly, mild thrombocytopenia and, in the bone marrow, numerous histiocytes containing cytoplasmic granules which stain bright blue with the usual hematologic stains. The syndrome is the consequence of an inherited metabolic defect analogous to Gaucher disease and other sphingolipidoses.
Defects in APOE are a cause of lipoprotein glomerulopathy (LPG) [MIM:611771]. LPG is an uncommon kidney disease characterized by proteinuria, progressive kidney failure, and distinctive lipoprotein thrombi in glomerular capillaries. It mainly affects people of Japanese and Chinese origin. The disorder has rarely been described in Caucasians. -
Sequence similarities
Belongs to the apolipoprotein A1/A4/E family. -
Post-translational
modificationsSynthesized with the sialic acid attached by O-glycosidic linkage and is subsequently desialylated in plasma. O-glycosylated with core 1 or possibly core 8 glycans. Thr-307 is a minor glycosylation site compared to Ser-308.
Glycated in plasma VLDL of normal subjects, and of hyperglycemic diabetic patients at a higher level (2-3 fold).
Phosphorylation sites are present in the extracelllular medium. -
Cellular localization
Secreted. - Information by UniProt
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Alternative names
- AD2
- Apo-E
- APOE
see all -
Database links
- Entrez Gene: 11816 Mouse
- SwissProt: P08226 Mouse
- Unigene: 305152 Mouse
Images
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Background-subtracted data values (mean +/- SD) are graphed.
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SimpleStep ELISA technology allows the formation of the antibody-antigen complex in one single step, reducing assay time to 90 minutes. Add samples or standards and antibody mix to wells all at once, incubate, wash, and add your final substrate. See protocol for a detailed step-by-step guide.
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The concentrations of Apolipoprotein E were measured in duplicates, interpolated from the Apolipoprotein E standard curves and corrected for sample dilution. Undiluted samples are as follows: serum 1:56,000, plasma (citrate) 1:56,000, plasma (EDTA) 1:7,000 and plasma (heparin) 1:56,000. The interpolated dilution factor corrected values are plotted (mean +/- SD, n=2). The mean Apolipoprotein E concentration was determined to be 155.61 µg/mL in neat serum, 135.57 µg/mL in neat plasma (citrate), 132.0 µg/mL in neat plasma (EDTA), and 161.3 µg/mL in neat plasma (heparin).
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To learn more about the advantages of recombinant antibodies see here.