Purpose | C-Series Human Chemokine Antibody Array 1 Kit. Detects 38 Human Chemokines. Suitable for all liquid sample types. |
Brand | RayBio? |
Sample Type | Serum, Plasma, Cell Culture Supernatant, Cell Lysate, Tissue Lysate |
Analytical Method | Semi-Quantitative |
Detection Method | Chemiluminescent |
Specificity | BLC (CXCL13), CCL28 (MEC), Ck beta 8-1 (CCL23), CTACK (CCL27), CXCL16, ENA-78 (CXCL5), Eotaxin-1 (CCL11), Eotaxin-2 (MPIF-2/CCL24), Eotaxin-3 (CCL26), Fractalkine (CX3CL1), GCP-2 (CXCL6), GRO alpha/beta/gamma, GRO alpha (CXCL1), HCC-4 (CCL16), I-309 (TCA-3/CCL1), I-TAC (CXCL11), IL-8 (CXCL8), IP-10 (CXCL10), Lymphotactin (XCL1), MCP-1 (CCL2), MCP-2 (CCL8), MCP-3 (MARC/CCL7), MCP-4 (CCL13), MDC (CCL22), MIG (CXCL9), MIP-1 alpha (CCL3), MIP-1 beta (CCL4), MIP-1 delta (CCL15), MIP-3 alpha (CCL20), MIP-3 beta (CCL19), MPIF-1 (CCL23), NAP-2 (PPBP/CXCL7), PARC (CCL18), RANTES (CCL5), SDF-1 alpha (CXCL12 alpha), SDF-1 beta (CXCL12 beta), TARC (CCL17), TECK (CCL25) |
Characteristics |
|
Components |
Antibody Array Membranes Biotinylated Detection Antibody Cocktail Blocking Buffer Wash Buffers 1 and 2 Cell & Tissue Lysis Buffer Detection Buffers C and D Plastic Incubation Tray Protease Inhibitor Cocktail (in select kits) |
Material not included |
Pipettors, pipet tips and other common lab consumables Orbital shaker or oscillating rocker Tissue Paper, blotting paper or chromatography paper Adhesive tape or Saran Wrap Distilled or de-ionized water A chemiluminescent blot documentation system (such as UVP's ChemiDoc-It? or EpiChem II Benchtop Darkroom), X-ray Film and a suitable film processor, or another chemiluminescent detection system. |
Application Notes |
Perform ALL incubation and wash steps under gentle rotation or rocking motion (~0.5 to 1 cycle/sec) using an orbital shaker or oscillating rocker to ensure complete and even reagent/sample coverage. Rocking/rotating too vigorously may cause foaming or bubbles to appear on the membrane surface which, should be avoided. All washes and incubations should be performed in the Incubation Tray (ITEM 10) provided in the kit. Cover the Incubation Tray with the lid provided during all incubation steps to avoid evaporation and outside debris contamination. Ensure the membranes are completely covered with sufficient sample or reagent volume during each incubation. Avoid forceful pipetting directly onto the membrane, instead, gently pipette samples and reagents into a corner of each well. Aspirate samples and reagents completely after each step by suctioning off excess liquid with a pipette. Tilting the tray so the liquid moves to a corner and then pipetting is an effective method. Optional overnight incubations may be performed for the following step to increase overall spot signal intensities: - Sample Incubation - Biotinylated Antibody Cocktail Incubation - HRP-Streptavidin Incubation |
Comment |
The C-Series arrays feature chemiluminescent signal detection. The antibodies are spotted on nitrocellulose membrane solid supports and are handled in a very similar manner to Western blots. |
Sample Volume | 1 mL |
Plate | Membrane |
Protocol |
|
Sample Preparation |
Use serum-free conditioned media if possible. If serum-containing conditioned media is required, it is highly recommended that complete medium be used as a control since many types of sera contains cytokines. We recommend the following parameters for your samples: 50 to 100 μl of original or diluted serum, plasma, cell culture media, or other body fluid, or 50-500 μg/ml of protein for cell and tissue lysates. If you experience high background or if the fluorescent signal intensities exceed the detection range, further dilution of your sample is recommended. |
Assay Procedure |
|
Calculation of Results |
Visual comparison of array images may be sufficient to see differences in relative protein expression. However, most researchers will want to perform numerical comparisons of the signal intensities (or more precisely, signal densities), using 2-D densitometry. Gel/Blot documentation systems and other chemiluminescent or phosphorescent detection systems are usually sold as a package with compatible densitometry software. Any densitometry software should be sufficient to obtain spot signal densities from your scanned images. One such software program, ImageJ, is available for free from the NIH website along with an array plug-in. |
Assay Precision | Inter-array Coefficient of Variation (CV) of spot signal intensities as low as 5% when run under optimal conditions. |
Restrictions | For Research Use only |
Handling Advice | The antibody printed side of each membrane is marked by a dash (-) or number (#) in the upper left corner. Do not allow membranes to dry out during the experiment or they may become fragile and break OR high and/or uneven background may occur. Grasp membranes by the corners or edges only using forceps. DO NOT touch printed antibody spots. |
Storage | -20 °C |
Storage Comment | For best results, store the entire kit frozen at -20°C upon arrival. Stored frozen, the kit will be stable for at least 6 months which is the duration of the product warranty period. Once thawed, store array membranes and 1X Blocking Buffer at -20°C and all other reagents undiluted at 4°C for no more than 3 months. |
Expiry Date | 6 months |
Supplier Images |
|
Product cited in: |
Kumai, Nagato, Kobayashi, Komabayashi, Ueda, Kishibe, Ohkuri, Takahara, Celis, Harabuchi: "CCL17 and CCL22/CCR4 signaling is a strong candidate for novel targeted therapy against nasal natural killer/T-cell lymphoma." in: Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII, Vol. 64, Issue 6, pp. 697-705, 2015 (PubMed).
Roy, Mondal, Kordower, Pahan: "Attenuation of microglial RANTES by NEMO-binding domain peptide inhibits the infiltration of CD8(+) T cells in the nigra of hemiparkinsonian monkey." in: Neuroscience, Vol. 302, pp. 36-46, 2015 (PubMed). Schneberger, Cloonan, DeVasure, Bailey, Romberger, Wyatt: "Effect of elevated carbon dioxide on bronchial epithelial innate immune receptor response to organic dust from swine confinement barns." in: International immunopharmacology, Vol. 27, Issue 1, pp. 76-84, 2015 (PubMed). Ryu, Park, Kim, Ryu, Woo: "Tonsil-derived mesenchymal stromal cells produce CXCR2-binding chemokines and acquire follicular dendritic cell-like phenotypes under TLR3 stimulation." in: Cytokine, Vol. 73, Issue 2, pp. 225-35, 2015 (PubMed). De Boeck, Hendrix, Maynard, Van Bockstal, Dani?ls, Pauwels, Gespach, Bracke, De Wever: "Differential secretome analysis of cancer-associated fibroblasts and bone marrow-derived precursors to identify microenvironmental regulators of colon cancer progression." in: Proteomics, Vol. 13, Issue 2, pp. 379-88, 2013 (PubMed). McAlpine, Issekutz, Marshall: "Virus stimulation of human mast cells results in the recruitment of CD56? T cells by a mechanism dependent on CCR5 ligands." in: FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, Vol. 26, Issue 3, pp. 1280-9, 2012 (PubMed). Gómez-Pi?a, Martínez, Fernández-Ruíz, Del Fresno, Soares-Schanoski, Jurado, Siliceo, Toledano, Fernández-Palomares, García-Rio, Arnalich, Biswas, López-Collazo: "Role of MMPs in orchestrating inflammatory response in human monocytes via a TREM-1-PI3K-NF-?B pathway." in: Journal of leukocyte biology, Vol. 91, Issue 6, pp. 933-45, 2012 (PubMed). Al-Alwan, Chang, Baglole, Risse, Halayko, Martin, Eidelman, Hamid: "Autocrine-regulated airway smooth muscle cell migration is dependent on IL-17-induced growth-related oncogenes." in: The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology, Vol. 130, Issue 4, pp. 977-85.e6, 2012 (PubMed). Jamieson, Clarke, Steele, Samuel, Neumann, Jung, Huels, Olson, Das, Nibbs, Sansom: "Inhibition of CXCR2 profoundly suppresses inflammation-driven and spontaneous tumorigenesis." in: The Journal of clinical investigation, Vol. 122, Issue 9, pp. 3127-44, 2012 (PubMed). Brown, McAlpine, Huang, Haidl, Al-Afif, Marshall, Anderson: "RNA sensors enable human mast cell anti-viral chemokine production and IFN-mediated protection in response to antibody-enhanced dengue virus infection." in: PLoS ONE, Vol. 7, Issue 3, pp. e34055, 2012 (PubMed). McGovern, Cowburn, Porter, Walmsley, Summers, Thompson, Anwar, Willcocks, Whyte, Condliffe, Chilvers: "Hypoxia selectively inhibits respiratory burst activity and killing of Staphylococcus aureus in human neutrophils." in: Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950), Vol. 186, Issue 1, pp. 453-63, 2010 (PubMed). Binger, Stich, Andreas, Kaps, Sezer, Notter, Sittinger, Ringe: "Migration potential and gene expression profile of human mesenchymal stem cells induced by CCL25." in: Experimental cell research, Vol. 315, Issue 8, pp. 1468-79, 2009 (PubMed). Hsu, Wu, Chang, Su, Tsai, Lai, Shiau, Takada, Chang: "Epstein-Barr virus lytic transactivator Zta enhances chemotactic activity through induction of interleukin-8 in nasopharyngeal carcinoma cells." in: Journal of virology, Vol. 82, Issue 7, pp. 3679-88, 2008 (PubMed). Farahi, Cowburn, Upton, Deighton, Sobolewski, Gherardi, Morrell, Chilvers: "Eotaxin-1/CC chemokine ligand 11: a novel eosinophil survival factor secreted by human pulmonary artery endothelial cells." in: Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950), Vol. 179, Issue 2, pp. 1264-73, 2007 (PubMed). Sze, de Kleijn, Lai, Khia Way Tan, Zhao, Yeo, Low, Lian, Lee, Mitchell, El Oakley, Lim: "Elucidating the secretion proteome of human embryonic stem cell-derived mesenchymal stem cells." in: Molecular & cellular proteomics : MCP, Vol. 6, Issue 10, pp. 1680-9, 2007 (PubMed). Durand, Flacher, Roméas, Carrouel, Colomb, Vincent, Magloire, Couble, Bleicher, Staquet, Lebecque, Farges: "Lipoteichoic acid increases TLR and functional chemokine expression while reducing dentin formation in in vitro differentiated human odontoblasts." in: Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md. : 1950), Vol. 176, Issue 5, pp. 2880-7, 2006 (PubMed). Xu, Ganem: "Induction of chemokine production by latent Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus infection of endothelial cells." in: The Journal of general virology, Vol. 88, Issue Pt 1, pp. 46-50, 2006 (PubMed). Calliess: "[On the relation between interference proneness and psychological refractory period]." in: Psychologische Forschung, Vol. 32, Issue 4, pp. 337-68, 1970 (PubMed). Skillman, Lyons, Zollinger, Eltringham, Moore: "Physiologic effects of phenoxybenzamine infusion in man." in: Surgical forum, Vol. 17, pp. 50-2, 1970 (PubMed). |