| Field | Specification |
|---|---|
| Mfr No | |
| Clonality | |
| Conjugate | |
| Gene ID | |
| Host | |
| Immunogen | A human recombinant protein corresponding to amino acids Q25-P147 was used as the immunogen for the Angiogenin antibody. |
| Isotype | |
| Product Type | |
| Purity | |
| Reactivity | |
| Storage | |
| Target | |
| UniProt # |
Overview
Angiogenin Antibody is a research-use-only Rabbit polyclonal (rabbit origin) Rabbit IgG directed against Angiogenin. It is supplied for interpretation-focused detection and comparative profiling in WB, IF, IHC, FACS, ELISA. Reported localization context: Cytoplasmic, nuclear, secreted.
Key elements and design rationale
- Target context: This antibody is raised against A human recombinant protein corresponding to amino acids Q25-P147 was used as the immunogen for the Angiogenin antibody.. Epitope context matters because isoforms, processing, and post-translational modifications can change what is accessible in a given assay.
- Format: Antigen affinity purified. Format influences background and compatibility with different detection chemistries; conjugated formats (when present) can simplify multiplexing and reduce reliance on secondary reagents.
- Species reactivity: Human. Cross-species performance can vary with sequence divergence and epitope conservation, so interpretation should be anchored with appropriate biological controls.
- Localization: Cytoplasmic, nuclear, secreted. Subcellular compartment context can help guide expectations in imaging assays and informs fractionation-based comparisons in lysate workflows.
- Applications: WB, IF, IHC, FACS, ELISA. These indicate assay contexts where the antibody is commonly applied; actual performance depends on sample type and processing.
Polyclonal reagents can differ in how they recognize epitope features. Monoclonal antibodies often provide more consistent epitope targeting across lots, while polyclonal preparations may broaden recognition across related epitope variants.
Biological background
Angiogenin refers to the gene/protein target stated in the product record. Protein targets can exhibit context-dependent expression, regulated turnover, isoform diversity, and post-translational modifications that affect apparent molecular weight and epitope accessibility. For curated functional annotation, sequence features, and expression context, consult UniProtKB P03950, NCBI Gene 283.0, Ensembl, and Human Protein Atlas.
Research relevance and current trends
- Integrating antibody-based detection with single-cell and spatial atlasing efforts to connect RNA programs with protein-level abundance and localization in defined cell states.
- Expanding multiplexed imaging and high-content screening, where reagent specificity, cross-reactivity risk, and channel design (including direct conjugates) become central to interpretation.
- Growing emphasis on reproducibility and application-specific validation frameworks (e.g., genetic perturbation controls, orthogonal measurements, and independent antibody strategies) when drawing mechanistic conclusions.
Common research applications
- Western blot (WB): commonly used to compare relative abundance/size (e.g., band intensity or mobility shifts) between conditions.
- Immunofluorescence (IF): commonly used to compare subcellular localization patterns and redistribution across stimuli or phenotypes.
- Immunohistochemistry (IHC): commonly used to compare tissue- and cell-type–specific expression patterns in situ.
- FACS: commonly used for qualitative/quantitative detection where compatible with the assay context.
- ELISA: commonly used to compare quantitative comparison of target levels across samples (matrix-dependent).
Interpretation typically focuses on relative differences (presence/absence, fold-changes, compartment shifts, or population-level shifts) rather than absolute quantitation. When signal changes are observed, they may reflect altered expression, altered localization/trafficking, changes in modification state, or differences in sample composition; orthogonal readouts and appropriate controls help distinguish these possibilities.
Application details (record-specific): Western blot: 0.5-1ug/ml,Immunohistochemistry (FFPE): 2-5ug/ml,Immunofluorescence: 5ug/ml,Flow cytometry: 1-3ug/million cells,ELISA: 0.1-0.5ug/ml (human protein tested); request BSA-free format for coating
Application notes (record-specific): Optimal dilution of the Angiogenin antibody should be determined by the researcher.
Notes for experimental interpretation
- Product description (record-specific): Angiogenin (ANG1), also known as Ribonuclease 5, is a small 123 amino acid protein that in humans is encoded by the ANG gene. The protein encoded by this gene is an exceedingly potent mediator of new blood vessel formation. It hydrolyzes cellular tRNAs resulting in decreased protein synthesis and is similar to pancreatic ribonuclease. In addition, the mature peptide has antimicrobial activity against some bacteria and fungi, including S. pneumoniae and C. albicans. Alternative splicing results in two transcript variants encoding the same protein. This gene and the gene that encodes ribonuclease, RNase A family, 4 share promoters and 5' exons. Each gene splices to a unique downstream exon that contains its complete coding region.
- Potential confounders: isoforms, proteolytic processing, and PTMs can change epitope presentation and apparent size; fixation/denaturation state can also expose or mask epitopes. Species differences near the epitope may affect cross-reactivity.
- Control concepts: include genetic perturbation (KO/KD) or overexpression comparisons, orthogonal measurement (e.g., transcript or proteomics), and independent antibody/epitope strategies. For conjugated reagents, include staining-only/background controls appropriate to the detection chemistry.
Immunogen/epitope context is described as: A human recombinant protein corresponding to amino acids Q25-P147 was used as the immunogen for the Angiogenin antibody.. Monoclonal and polyclonal formats differ in epitope breadth; this can influence sensitivity to sequence variants, isoforms, or PTM-dependent recognition.
Customization & Add-ons: Can’t find the antibody you need—or require a custom format for your assay? We can help you source the best match or support custom antibody solutions for diverse research needs, including species and isotype selection, conjugations and labeling (e.g., HRP/AP, biotin, fluorophores), purification grade options (Protein A/G, affinity purified), formulation preferences (buffer selection, carrier-free, glycerol-free), custom concentrations and aliquoting, low-endotoxin options for cell-based work, and application-focused QC/validation support (project dependent). Click Talk to a Scientist to submit a request, email us at support@biohippo.com, or explore our Research Services for additional support—our team will follow up with feasibility details and next steps.