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PerCP Rat Anti-Mouse CD45R/B220
Product Details
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BD Pharmingen™
Mouse (QC Testing), Human (Reported)
Rat IgG2a, κ
Mouse Abelson Leukemia Virus-Induced pre-B tumor cells
Flow cytometry (Routinely Tested)
0.2 mg/ml
AB_394622
Aqueous buffered solution containing ≤0.09% sodium azide.
RUO


Preparation And Storage

The monoclonal antibody was purified from tissue culture supernatant or ascites by affinity chromatography. The antibody was conjugated with PerCP under optimum conditions, and unconjugated antibody and free PerCP were removed. Storage of PerCP conjugates in unoptimized diluent is not recommended and may result in loss of signal intensity. Store undiluted at 4°C and protected from prolonged exposure to light. Do not freeze.

Product Notices

  1. Since applications vary, each investigator should titrate the reagent to obtain optimal results.
  2. Please refer to www.bdbiosciences.com/us/s/resources for technical protocols.
  3. For fluorochrome spectra and suitable instrument settings, please refer to our Multicolor Flow Cytometry web page at www.bdbiosciences.com/colors.
  4. PerCP is a photosynthetic accessory pigment from Glenodinium species of dinoflagellates, which is excited by the 488-nm light of an Argon ion laser and fluoresces at 675 nm. Therefore, PerCP-labelled antibodies can be used with FITC- and R-PE–labelled reagents in most single-laser flow cytometers with no significant spectral overlap of PerCP fluorescence with that of FITC or R-PE. PerCP has been reported to undergo significant photobleaching, the magnitude of which increases as laser power is increased or beam focus is narrowed. For third-color flow¬cytometric analysis using ≥25-mW laser power, we recommend PE-Cy5-, PE-Cy7–, or PerCP-Cy5.5-conjugated reagents.
  5. Caution: Sodium azide yields highly toxic hydrazoic acid under acidic conditions. Dilute azide compounds in running water before discarding to avoid accumulation of potentially explosive deposits in plumbing.
553093 Rev. 11
Antibody Details
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RA3-6B2

The RA3-6B2 monoclonal antibody specifically binds to an epitope on the extracellular domain of the transmembrane CD45 glycoprotein which is dependent upon the expression of exon A and specific carbohydrate residues. It is expressed on B lymphocytes at all stages from pro-B through mature and activated B cell, but it is decreased on plasma cells and a subset of memory B cells. The levels of CD45R expression on the B-cell lineage appear to be developmentally regulated. It is also reportedly found on the abnormal T cells involved in the lymphadenopathy of lpr/lpr and gld/gld mutant mice, on lytically active subsets of lymphokine-activated killer cells (NK cells and non-MHC-restricted CTL), on apoptotic T lymphocytes of mice injected with bacterial superantigen, on a population of NK-cell precursors in the bone marrow, and on B-lymphocyte, T-lymphocyte, and macrophage progenitors in fetal liver. The CD45R antigen has been reported not to be on hematopoietic stem cells, naive T lymphocytes, or MHC-restricted CTL. CD45 is a member of the Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase (PTP) family: Its intracellular (COOH-terminal) region contains two PTP catalytic domains, and the extracellular region is highly variable due to alternative splicing of exons 4, 5, and 6 (designated A, B, and C, respectively), plus differing levels of glycosylation. The CD45 isoforms detected in the mouse are cell type-, maturation, and activation state-specific. The CD45 isoforms play complex roles in T-cell and B-cell antigen receptor signal transduction. CD45R is commonly used as a pan B-cell marker; however, CD19 expression, detectable by the rat anti-mouse CD19 antibody (clone 1D3), is reported to be more restricted to the B-cell lineage. The rat anti-mouse CD45R antibody (clone RA3-6B2) has been reported to enhance isotype switching during in vitro B-cell responses and to inhibit in vivo B-cell responses. Cross-reaction of the RA3-6B2 clone with activated human T lymphocytes has also been reportedly observed.

553093 Rev. 11
Format Details
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PerCP
PerCP dye is part of the BD blue family of dyes. This dye is a fluorescent protein complex with an excitation maximum (Ex Max) of 481 nm and an emission maximum (Em Max) at 675 nm. PerCP is designed to be excited by the blue laser (488 nm) and detected using an optical filter centered near 680 nm (e.g., a 695/40 nm bandpass filter). The donor dye can be partially excited by the Violet (405 nm) laser resulting in cross-laser excitation and fluorescence spillover. Please ensure that your instrument’s configurations (lasers and optical filters) are appropriate for this dye.
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PerCP
Blue 488 nm
481 nm
675 nm
553093 Rev.11
Citations & References
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View product citations for antibody "553093" on CiteAb

Development References (22)

  1. Afar B, Merrill J, Clark EA. Detection of lymphocyte subsets using three-color/single-laser flow cytometry and the fluorescent dye peridinin chlorophyll-alpha protein. J Clin Immunol. 1991; 11(5):254-261. (Biology). View Reference
  2. Allman DM, Ferguson SE, Cancro MP. Peripheral B cell maturation. I. Immature peripheral B cells in adults are heat-stable antigenhi and exhibit unique signaling characteristics. J Immunol. 1992; 149(8):2533-2540. (Biology). View Reference
  3. Asensi V, Kimeno K, Kawamura I, Sakumoto M, Nomoto K. Treatment of autoimmune MRL/lpr mice with anti-B220 monoclonal antibody reduces the level of anti-DNA antibodies and lymphadenopathies. Immunology. 1989; 68(2):204-208. (Clone-specific). View Reference
  4. Ballas ZK, Rasmussen W. Lymphokine-activated killer cells. VII. IL-4 induces an NK1.1+CD8 alpha+beta- TCR-alpha beta B220+ lymphokine-activated killer subset. J Immunol. 1993; 150(1):17-30. (Biology). View Reference
  5. Bleesing JJ, Morrow MR, Uzel G, Fleisher TA. Human T cell activation induces the expression of a novel CD45 isoform that is analogous to murine B220 and is associated with altered O-glycan synthesis and onset of apoptosis. Cell Immunol. 2001; 213(1):72-81. (Clone-specific). View Reference
  6. Coffman RL. Surface antigen expression and immunoglobulin gene rearrangement during mouse pre-B cell development. Immunol Rev. 1982; 69:5-23. (Biology). View Reference
  7. Domiati-Saad R, Ogle EW, Justement LB. Administration of anti-CD45 mAb specific for a B cell-restricted epitope abrogates the B cell response to a T-dependent antigen in vivo. J Immunol. 1993; 151(11):5936-5947. (Clone-specific). View Reference
  8. Driver DJ, McHeyzer-Williams LJ, Cool M, Stetson DB, McHeyzer-Williams MG. Development and maintenance of a B220- memory B cell compartment. J Immunol. 2001; 167(3):1393-1405. (Biology). View Reference
  9. George A, Rath S, Shroff KE, Wang M, Durdik JM. Ligation of CD45 on B cells can facilitate production of secondary Ig isotypes. J Immunol. 1994; 152(3):1014-1021. (Clone-specific). View Reference
  10. Greimers R, Trebak M, Moutschen M, Jacobs N, Boniver J. Improved four-color flow cytometry method using fluo-3 and triple immunofluorescence for analysis of intracellular calcium ion ([Ca2+]i) fluxes among mouse lymph node B- and T-lymphocyte subsets. Cytometry. 1996; 23(3):205-217. (Biology). View Reference
  11. Hardy RR, Carmack CE, Shinton SA, Kemp JD, Hayakawa K. Resolution and characterization of pro-B and pre-pro-B cell stages in normal mouse bone marrow. J Exp Med. 1991; 173(5):1213-1225. (Biology). View Reference
  12. Hathcock KS, Hirano H, Murakami S, Hodes RJ. CD45 expression by B cells. Expression of different CD45 isoforms by subpopulations of activated B cells. J Immunol. 1992; 149(7):2286-2294. (Biology). View Reference
  13. Johnson P, Maiti A, Ng DHW. CD45: A family of leukocyte-specific cell surface glycoproteins. In: Herzenberg LA, Weir DM, Herzenberg LA, Blackwell C , ed. Weir's Handbook of Experimental Immunology, Vol 2. Cambridge: Blackwell Science; 1997:62.1-62.16.
  14. Kobata T, Takasaki K, Asahara H, et al. Apoptosis with FasL+ cell infiltration in the periphery and thymus of corrected autoimmune mice. Immunology. 1997; 92(2):206-213. (Biology). View Reference
  15. Krop I, de Fougerolles AR, Hardy RR, Allison M, Schlissel MS, Fearon DT. Self-renewal of B-1 lymphocytes is dependent on CD19. Eur J Immunol. 1996; 26(1):238-242. (Biology). View Reference
  16. Laouar Y, Ezine S. In vivo CD4+ lymph node T cells from lpr mice generate CD4-CD8-B220+TCR-beta low cells. J Immunol. 1994; 153(9):3948-3955. (Biology). View Reference
  17. Puzanov IJ, Bennett M, Kumar V. IL-15 can substitute for the marrow microenvironment in the differentiation of natural killer cells. J Immunol. 1996; 157(10):4282-4285. (Biology). View Reference
  18. Renno T, Hahne M, Tschopp J, MacDonald HR. Peripheral T cells undergoing superantigen-induced apoptosis in vivo express B220 and upregulate Fas and Fas ligand. J Exp Med. 1996; 183(2):431-437. (Biology). View Reference
  19. Rolink A, ten Boekel E, Melchers F, Fearon DT, Krop I, Andersson J. A subpopulation of B220+ cells in murine bone marrow does not express CD19 and contains natural killer cell progenitors. J Exp Med. 1996; 183(1):187-194. (Biology). View Reference
  20. Sagara S, Sugaya K, Tokoro Y, et al. B220 expression by T lymphoid progenitor cells in mouse fetal liver. J Immunol. 1997; 158(2):666-676. (Biology). View Reference
  21. Shapiro HM. Practical Flow Cytometry, 3rd Edition. New York: Wiley-Liss, Inc; 1995:280-281.
  22. Waggoner AS, Ernst LA, Chen CH, Rechtenwald DJ. PE-CY5. A new fluorescent antibody label for three-color flow cytometry with a single laser. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1993; 677:185-193. (Biology). View Reference
View All (22) View Less
553093 Rev. 11

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For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic or therapeutic procedures.