Note: Not all species have been tested for usefulness with this product. Only those species listed have been tested. We cannot make any guarantees about additional reactivities which may or may not occur.
This product is for research use only and is not approved for use in humans or in clinical diagnosis. Products are guaranteed for 6 months from date of receipt, except for peptides and proteins which are guaranteed for 3 months.
CD95, also known as Fas and Apo-1, is a 40-50 kDa type I transmembrane glycoprotein and a member of the tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily. It is expressed by activated lymphocytes, monocytes, neutrophils, fibroblasts and cell lines. Fas ligand binding to CD95 induces apoptosis in activated mature lymphocytes thereby playing a role in maintaining peripheral tolerance. Crosslinking of CD95 by the monoclonal antibodies DX2 and DX3 delivers an apoptotic signal to Fas-sensitive cells, indicating that these monoclonal antibodies recognize a functional epitope of CD95. (1-5)
Flow cytometry: CD95 Antibody (DX2) [NBP1-28533] - 1 ug/10^6 The Jurkat human lymphoma cell line was stained with mouse anti-human CD95/Fas-FITC, following which large cells were gated and analyzed on a flow cytometer
Barclay, A.N., M.H. Brown, S.K.A. Law, A.J. McKnight, M.G. Tomlinson, P.A. van der Merwe, eds. 1997. The Leukocyte Antigens Facts Book, 2nd Edition, CD95 Section, Academic Press, New York, p. 363.
Kishimoto, T., A.E.G. von dern Borne, S.M. Goyert, D.Y. Mason, M. Miyasaka, L. Moretta, K. Okumura, S. Shaw, T.A. Springer, K. Sugamura, H. Zola, eds. 1998. Leukocyte Typing VI: White Cell Differentiation Antigens, Academic Press, New York.
Schlossman, S., L. Bloumsell, W. Gilks, J.M. Harlan, C. Kishimoto, J. Ritz, S. Shaw, R. Silverstein, T. Springer, T.F. Tedder, R.F. Todd, eds. 1995. Leukocyte Typing V: White Cell Differentiation Antigens, Oxford University Press, Oxford.