Anti-Chikungunya E1 Protein - Purified in vivo GOLD™ Functional Grade

Leinco Technologies
Product Code: LEI-C468
Product Group: Primary Antibodies
CodeSizePrice
LEI-C468-1.0mg1.0 mg£175.00
Quantity:
LEI-C468-5.0mg5.0 mg£380.00
Quantity:
LEI-C468-25mg25 mg£1,014.00
Quantity:
LEI-C468-50mg50 mg£1,556.00
Quantity:
LEI-C468-100mg100 mg£2,159.00
Quantity:
Prices exclude any Taxes / VAT

Overview

Host Type: Mouse
Antibody Isotype: IgG2c
Antibody Clonality: Monoclonal
Antibody Clone: CHK-166
Regulatory Status: RUO
Target Species: Mouse
Applications:
  • Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA)
  • Flow Cytometry
  • In Vivo Assay
  • Neutralisation
Shipping:
2-8°C
Storage:
Functional grade preclinical antibodies may be stored sterile as received at 2-8°C for up to one month. For longer term storage aseptically aliquot in working volumes without diluting and store at -80°C. Avoid Repeated Freeze Thaw Cycles.

Further Information

Antigen Distribution:
E1 is expressed on the surface of CHIKV.
Concentration:
? 5.0 mg/ml
Conjugate/Tag/Label:
in vivo GOLD™, Purified in vivo Functional Grade
Format:
This monoclonal antibody is aseptically packaged and formulated in 0.01 M phosphate buffered saline (150 mM NaCl) PBS pH 7.2 - 7.4 with no carrier protein, potassium, calcium or preservatives added. Due to inherent biochemical properties of antibodies, certain products may be prone to precipitation over time. Precipitation may be removed by aseptic centrifugation and/or filtration.
Formulation:
This monoclonal antibody is aseptically packaged and formulated in 0.01 M phosphate buffered saline (150 mM NaCl) PBS pH 7.2 - 7.4 with no carrier protein, potassium, calcium or preservatives added. Due to inherent biochemical properties of antibodies, certain products may be prone to precipitation over time. Precipitation may be removed by aseptic centrifugation and/or filtration.
Immunogen:
Chikungunya E1 protein
Long Description:
Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is a mosquito-transmitted alphavirus that causes epidemics globally and has been declared a notable disease by the CDC1,2. CHIKV is an enveloped virus with an 11.8-kb single-stranded, positive-sense RNA genome with two open reading frames3,4. There are three main genotypes, having 95.2 to 99.8% amino acid identity: Asian, West African, and East/Central/South African (ECSA). The mature CHIKV virion is comprised of a nucleocapsid protein C and two glycoproteins, E1 and E25. E1 participates in virus fusion. E2 functions in attachment to cells. E1 and E2 form 80 trimeric spikes on the virus surface6. CHK-166 is a neutralizing monoclonal antibody (MAb) that provides complete protection against lethality as prophylaxis in Ifnar?/? mice5. It was generated by infecting adult Irf7?/? C57BL/6 mice with the La Reunion 2006 OPY-1 strain of CHIKV (CHIKV-LR) and boosting with recombinant CHIKV E2 protein or infectious CHIKV-LR. Myeloma cell-splenocyte fusions were screened for binding to CHIKV-LR infected cells and the resulting MAb was cloned for analysis. Neutralization escape variants were generated to map the CHK-166 epitope5. CHK-166 recognizes amino acids on domain II of E1, adjacent to the conserved fusion loop. All escape mutants had a single K61T mutation in the E1 protein. CHK-166 inhibits CHIKV infection in cell culture in a post-attachment neutralization assay5. CHK-166 also protects 63% of mice from death when a single dose is administered 24 h after CHIKV infection. If both CHK-166 and CHK-152 are administered post-infection in mice, then viral resistance is prevented and the treatment window is extended5. Additionally, combination CHK-152/CHK-166 MAb therapy in rhesus macaques reduces viral infection and spread, neutralizes reservoirs of infectious virus, and does not produce escape viruses7.
Purity:
?95% monomer by analytical SEC, >95% by SDS Page
Target:
Chikungunya, E1

References

1. Barrera, R., Hunsperger, E., Lanciotti, RS. et al. Preparedness and response for chikungunya virus introduction in the Americas. Pan American Health Organization; National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases (U.S.). Division of Vector-Borne Diseases. 2011. 2. Silva, JVJ Jr., Ludwig-Begall, LF., Oliveira-Filho, EF. et al. Acta Trop. 188:213-224. 2018. 3. Powers, AM., Brault, AC., Tesh, RB. et al. J. Gen. Virol. 81:471?479. 2000. 4. Arankalle, VA., Shrivastava, S., Cherian, S. et al. J. Gen. Virol. 88:1967?1976. 2007. 5. Pal, P., Dowd, KA., Brien, JD. et al. PLoS Pathog. 9(4):e1003312. 2013. 6. Mukhopadhyay, S., Zhang, W., Gabler, S. et al. Structure. 14(1):63-73. 2006. 7. Pal, P, Fox, JM., Hawman, DW. et al. J Virol. 88(15):8213-8226. 2014.