This kit is for the detection of Human APOH / Apolipoprotein H. No significant cross-reactivity or interference between APOH / Apolipoprotein H and analogs was observed. This claim is limited by existing techniques therefore cross-reactivity may exist with untested analogs.
LS-F26669 is a 96-well enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the Quantitative detection of Human APOH / Apolipoprotein H in samples of Plasma and Serum. It is based upon a Sandwich assay principle and can be used to detect levels of APOH / Apolipoprotein H as low as 1000 picograms per milliliter.
Plasma, Serum
96-Well Strip Plate
Colorimetric - 450nm (TMB)
Quantitative
250 - 5000 pg/ml
1000 pg/ml
1.5 h
Intra-Assay: CV%<9% Inter-Assay: CV%<10%
Due to their limited shelf life, LSBio ELISA kits are not typically stocked as finished goods. Upon receipt of an order each kit is assembled and tested to ensure that it meets specifications before shipping. Minor changes may occur to the Range, Sensitivity, and Precision. In the event of a significant change the order would be confirmed with the customer before shipping ELISA kit lot numbers reflect the date of final assembly and testing for each specific kit rather than a bulk manufactured lot. All kits are tested to confirm that they fall within their defined Inter- and Intra- assay coefficient of variation.
Adhesive Plate Sealers
Coated 96-well Strip Plate
Standard A
Standard B
Standard C
Standard D
Standard E
Standard F
Balance Solution
HRP-Conjugate
Wash Buffer (100x)
Substrate A
Substrate B
Stop Solution
Short term: 4°C; Long term: see manual.
For research use only.
About APOH / Apolipoprotein HP02749 NM_000042 NP_000033.2
Apolipoprotein H has been implicated in a variety of physiologic pathways including lipoprotein metabolism, coagulation, and the production of antiphospholipid autoantibodies. APOH may be a required cofactor for anionic phospholipid binding by the antiphospholipid autoantibodies found in sera of many patients with lupus and primary antiphospholipid syndrome, but it does not seem to be required for the reactivity of antiphospholipid autoantibodies associated with infections. (More About APOH / Apolipoprotein H)