| Field | Specification |
|---|---|
| Mfr No | |
| Alternative Names | CGAGlycoprotein hormones alpha chain ELISA Kit; Anterior pituitary glycoprotein hormones common subunit alpha ELISA Kit; Follicle-stimulating hormone alpha chain ELISA Kit; FSH-alpha ELISA Kit; Follitropin alpha chain ELISA Kit; Luteinizing hormone alpha chain ELISA Kit; LSH-alpha ELISA Kit; Lutropin alpha chain ELISA Kit; Thyroid-stimulating hormone alpha chain ELISA Kit; TSH-alpha ELISA Kit; Thyrotropin alpha chain ELISA Kit |
| Assay Time | |
| Assay Type | |
| Detection Range | |
| Detection Wavelength | |
| Product Type | |
| Reactivity | |
| Sample Type(s) | serum, plasma, tissue homogenates |
| Sensitivity | |
| Species | |
| Target | |
| UniProt # |
Background
Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (CGA) is a biological molecule commonly studied in cancer research. Hormones and peptide mediators support systemic communication across organs and physiological states.
UniProt: Q8WMW8
Biological context
Researchers often monitor Thyroid Stimulating Hormone in serum, plasma, and tissue homogenates to better understand themes such as tumor microenvironment biology, cell proliferation and apoptosis, and metastasis and invasion pathways. In many model systems, measured levels can shift with physiology, experimental perturbation, or disease-associated changes, making careful biological interpretation important.
Interpreting changes in measured levels
Depending on sample matrix and study design, increases or decreases in Thyroid Stimulating Hormone may reflect differences in expression, secretion, turnover, or compartmentalization rather than a single mechanism. Interpretation is typically strengthened by evaluating related molecules (for example, cell-cycle regulators, invasion/ECM markers, and immune-oncology mediators) and by keeping pre-analytical variables consistent across groups.
Nomenclature
In publications and databases, Thyroid Stimulating Hormone may also appear under names such as CGAGlycoprotein hormones alpha chain and Anterior pituitary glycoprotein hormones common subunit alpha. When comparing studies, confirm that the reported analyte refers to the same molecule and species context.
Why ELISA data are widely used
ELISA is a common approach for quantitative measurement of proteins and biomarkers in complex samples, enabling comparisons across experimental groups and time points. When integrating results with other readouts, consider species biology, sample type, and the broader pathway context that Thyroid Stimulating Hormone participates in.
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