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1μg per million cells in 100μl volume

CD69 protein is a type II transmembrane glycoprotein belonging to the C-type lectin receptor family and a member of the NK cell signaling transduction gene complex family. It is the earliest surface antigen expressed after the activation of T lymphocytes and can serve as a co-stimulatory signal to promote further activation and proliferation of T cells. Additionally, CD69 is also induced to express on NK cells, B cells, macrophages, neutrophils, and eosinophils. When external stimuli disappear, the expression of CD69 on activated T cells rapidly decreases. Furthermore, the expression of CD69 protein is associated with various disease states. For instance, it is closely related to the occurrence and development of malignancies, and its expression level in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia is tightly linked to factors such as the number of peripheral blood lymphocytes and clinical staging, indicating its potential as a new prognostic indicator for this disease. CD69 is also considered a marker of activation for eosinophils and certain other cells, and its high-level expression may suggest the presence of immune system diseases, hematological disorders, such as rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, leukemia, lymphoma, and more.


12 months from date of receipt / reconstitution, 2 to 8 °C as supplied
参考图片
C57BL/6 mouse splenocytes were treated with 3μg/ml Concanavalin A and were stained with FITC Rat IgG2a Isotype Control (Black line histogram) and SDT FITC Rat Anti-Mouse CD69 Antibody (Red line histogram) at 1 μg/test, cells without incubation with primary antibody and secondary antibody (Blue line histogram) was used as unlabelled control. Flow cytometry and data analysis were performed using BD FACSymphony™ A1 and FlowJo™ software.