Mouse Ephrin-B1 Antibody

Catalog # Availability Size / Price Qty
AF473
AF473-SP
Detection of Mouse Ephrin‑B1 by Western Blot.
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Product Details
Citations (32)
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Mouse Ephrin-B1 Antibody Summary

Species Reactivity
Mouse
Specificity
Detects mouse Ephrin-B1 in direct ELISAs and Western blots.
Source
Polyclonal Goat IgG
Purification
Antigen Affinity-purified
Immunogen
Mouse myeloma cell line NS0-derived recombinant mouse Ephrin-B1
Lys30-Ser229
Accession # AAA53231
Formulation
Lyophilized from a 0.2 μm filtered solution in PBS with Trehalose. *Small pack size (SP) is supplied either lyophilized or as a 0.2 µm filtered solution in PBS.
Label
Unconjugated

Applications

Recommended Concentration
Sample
Western Blot
0.25 µg/mL
See below
Simple Western
25 µg/mL
See below
Immunohistochemistry
5-15 µg/mL
See below

Please Note: Optimal dilutions should be determined by each laboratory for each application. General Protocols are available in the Technical Information section on our website.

Scientific Data

Western Blot Detection of Mouse Ephrin-B1 antibody by Western Blot. View Larger

Detection of Mouse Ephrin‑B1 by Western Blot. Western blot shows lysates of mouse lung tissue. PVDF membrane was probed with 0.25 µg/mL of Goat Anti-Mouse Ephrin-B1 Antigen Affinity-purified Polyclonal Antibody (Catalog # AF473) followed by HRP-conjugated Anti-Goat IgG Secondary Antibody (Catalog # HAF019). A specific band was detected for Ephrin-B1 at approximately 45-50 kDa (as indicated). This experiment was conducted under reducing conditions and using Immunoblot Buffer Group 1.

Immunohistochemistry Ephrin-B1 antibody in Mouse Kidney by Immunohistochemistry (IHC-Fr). View Larger

Ephrin-B1 in Mouse Kidney. Ephrin-B1 was detected in immersion fixed frozen sections of mouse kidney using Goat Anti-Mouse Ephrin-B1 Antigen Affinity-purified Polyclonal Antibody (Catalog # AF473) at 5 µg/mL overnight at 4 °C. Tissue was stained using the Anti-Goat HRP-DAB Cell & Tissue Staining Kit (brown; Catalog # CTS008) and counterstained with hematoxylin (blue). View our protocol for Chromogenic IHC Staining of Frozen Tissue Sections.

Simple Western Detection of Mouse Ephrin‑B1 antibody by Simple Western<sup>TM</sup>. View Larger

Detection of Mouse Ephrin‑B1 by Simple WesternTM. Simple Western lane view shows lysates of mouse lung tissue and mouse spleen tissue, loaded at 0.2 mg/mL. A specific band was detected for Ephrin-B1 at approximately 65 kDa (as indicated) using 25 µg/mL of Goat Anti-Mouse Ephrin-B1 Antigen Affinity-purified Polyclonal Antibody (Catalog # AF473) followed by 1:50 dilution of HRP-conjugated Anti-Goat IgG Secondary Antibody (Catalog # HAF109). This experiment was conducted under reducing conditions and using the 12-230 kDa separation system.

Reconstitution Calculator

Reconstitution Calculator

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Preparation and Storage

Reconstitution
Reconstitute at 0.2 mg/mL in sterile PBS.
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Shipping
Lyophilized product is shipped at ambient temperature. Liquid small pack size (-SP) is shipped with polar packs. Upon receipt, store immediately at the temperature recommended below.
Stability & Storage
Use a manual defrost freezer and avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles.
  • 12 months from date of receipt, -20 to -70 °C as supplied.
  • 1 month, 2 to 8 °C under sterile conditions after reconstitution.
  • 6 months, -20 to -70 °C under sterile conditions after reconstitution.

Background: Ephrin-B1

Ephrin-B1, also known as LERK-2, ELK-L, EFL-3, Cek5-L, and STRA-1 (1), is a member of the ephrin ligand family which binds members of the Eph receptor family. All ligands share a conserved extracellular sequence, which most likely corresponds to the receptor binding domain. This conserved sequence consists of approximately 125 amino acids and includes four invariant cysteines. The B-class ligands are transmembrane proteins which can become tyrosine phosphorylated upon receptor ligation. The cytoplasmic domains are approximately 80 amino acids long and are highly conserved, especially the last 33 amino acids. Several signaling molecules have been shown to interact with the cytoplasmic region, although specific signaling roles have yet to be elucidated. Ephrin-B1 has been shown to bind EphA3, EphB1, EphB2, EphB3, and EphB4 (2, 3). The extracellular domains of human and mouse Ephrin-B1 share 94% amino acid identity. Only membrane-bound or Fc-clustered ligands are capable of activating the receptor in vitro. Soluble monomeric ligands bind the receptor but do not induce receptor autophosphorylation and activation (2). In vivo, the ligands and receptors display reciprocal expression (3). It has been found that nearly all receptors and ligands are expressed in developing and adult neural tissue (3). The Eph/ephrin families also appear to play a role in angiogenesis (3).

References
  1. Eph Nomenclature Committee [letter] (1997) Cell 90:403.
  2. Flanagan, J.G. and P. Vanderhaeghen (1998) Annu. Rev. Neurosci. 21:309.
  3. Pasquale, E.B. (1997) Curr. Opin. Cell Biol. 9:608.
Entrez Gene IDs
1947 (Human); 13641 (Mouse); 25186 (Rat)
Alternate Names
Cek5-L; EFL3; EFL-3; EFNB1; ELK ligand; ELK-L; EphrinB1; Ephrin-B1; LERK-2; STRA-1

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Citations for Mouse Ephrin-B1 Antibody

R&D Systems personnel manually curate a database that contains references using R&D Systems products. The data collected includes not only links to publications in PubMed, but also provides information about sample types, species, and experimental conditions.

32 Citations: Showing 1 - 10
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  1. Mule Regulates the Intestinal Stem Cell Niche via the Wnt Pathway and Targets EphB3 for Proteasomal and Lysosomal Degradation
    Authors: Relation T, Yi T, Guess AJ et al.
    Cell Stem Cell
  2. Ephrin-B1 regulates the adult diastolic function through a late postnatal maturation of cardiomyocyte surface crests
    Authors: C Karsenty, C Guilbeau-F, G Genet, MH Seguelas, P Alzieu, O Cazorla, A Montagner, Y Blum, C Dubroca, J Maupoint, B Tramunt, M Cauquil, T Sulpice, S Richard, S Arcucci, R Flores-Flo, N Pataluch, R Montoriol, P Sicard, A Deney, T Couffinhal, JM Senard, C Galés
    Elife, 2023-01-17;12(0):.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Whole Tissue
    Applications: IHC
  3. Role of EphB2/ephrin-B1 signalling in the development and progression of obesity-associated colorectal cancer
    Authors: Y Suzuki, K Okabayashi, H Hasegawa, M Tsuruta, R Seishima, T Tokuda, Y Kitagawa
    Oncology Letters, 2022-07-19;24(3):316.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Whole Tissue
    Applications: IHC
  4. Expression of axon guidance ligands and their receptors in the cornea and trigeminal ganglia and their recovery after corneal epithelium injury
    Authors: Victor H. Guaiquil, Cissy Xiao, Daniel Lara, Greigory Dimailig, Qiang Zhou
    Experimental Eye Research
  5. Development of Tbet- and CD11c-expressing B cells in a viral infection requires T follicular helper cells outside of germinal centers
    Authors: Wenzhi Song, Olivia Q. Antao, Emily Condiff, Gina M. Sanchez, Irene Chernova, Krzysztof Zembrzuski et al.
    Immunity
  6. The Value of EphB2 Receptor and Cognate Ephrin Ligands in Prognostic and Predictive Assessments of Human Breast Cancer
    Authors: Abdul Shukkur Ebrahim, Zeyad Hailat, Sudeshna Bandyopadhyay, Daniel Neill, Mustapha Kandouz
    International Journal of Molecular Sciences
  7. Expression and localisation of ephrin-B1 and EphB4 in steroidogenic cells in the naturally cycling mouse ovary
    Authors: J Alam, K Ogawa
    Reproductive biology, 2021-05-13;21(3):100511.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Whole Tissue
    Applications: IHC
  8. SNAP23 deficiency causes severe brain dysplasia through the loss of radial glial cell polarity
    Authors: Masataka Kunii, Yuria Noguchi, Shin-ichiro Yoshimura, Satoshi Kanda, Tomohiko Iwano, Erda Avriyanti et al.
    Journal of Cell Biology
  9. Astrocytic Ephrin-B1 Controls Excitatory-Inhibitory Balance in Developing Hippocampus
    Authors: Amanda Q. Nguyen, Samantha Sutley, Jordan Koeppen, Karen Mina, Simone Woodruff, Sandy Hanna et al.
    The Journal of Neuroscience
  10. The receptor tyrosine kinase EPHB6 regulates catecholamine exocytosis in adrenal gland chromaffin cells
    Authors: W Shi, B Ye, M Rame, Y Wang, D Ciocca, S Reibel Foi, J Peng, S Qi, N Vitale, H Luo, J Wu
    J. Biol. Chem., 2020-04-22;0(0):.
    Species: Human, Mouse
    Sample Types: Whole Cell, Whole Cells
    Applications: Cell Culture
  11. Role of forward and reverse signaling in Eph receptor and ephrin mediated cell segregation
    Authors: Zhonglin Wu, Tim G. Ashlin, Qiling Xu, David G. Wilkinson
    Experimental Cell Research
  12. Functional consequences of synapse remodeling following astrocyte-specific regulation of ephrin-B1 in the adult hippocampus
    Authors: J Koeppen, AQ Nguyen, AM Nikolakopo, M Garcia, S Hanna, S Woodruff, Z Figueroa, A Obenaus, IM Ethell
    J. Neurosci., 2018-05-23;0(0):.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Whole Tissue
    Applications: IHC-P
  13. EphrinB1 promotes cancer cell migration and invasion through the interaction with RhoGDI1
    Authors: H J Cho, Y-S Hwang, J Yoon, M Lee, H G Lee, I O Daar
    Oncogene
  14. Unidirectional Eph/ephrin signaling creates a cortical actomyosin differential to drive cell segregation
    Authors: AK O'Neill, AA Kindberg, TK Niethamer, AR Larson, HH Ho, ME Greenberg, JO Bush
    J. Cell Biol., 2016-10-17;215(2):217-229.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Whole Tissue
    Applications: IHC
  15. Tissue-Specific Effects of Reduced beta-catenin Expression on Adenomatous Polyposis Coli Mutation-Instigated Tumorigenesis in Mouse Colon and Ovarian Epithelium.
    Authors: Feng Y, Sakamoto N, Wu R, Liu J, Wiese A, Green M, Green M, Akyol A, Roy B, Zhai Y, Cho K, Fearon E
    PLoS Genet, 2015-11-03;11(11):e1005638.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Whole Tissue
    Applications: IHC-P
  16. Multiple mouse models of primary lymphedema exhibit distinct defects in lymphovenous valve development.
    Authors: Geng X, Cha B, Mahamud M, Lim K, Silasi-Mansat R, Uddin M, Miura N, Xia L, Simon A, Engel J, Chen H, Lupu F, Srinivasan R
    Dev Biol, 2015-11-02;409(1):218-33.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Whole Tissue
    Applications: IHC
  17. Anchoring and synaptic stability of PSD-95 is driven by ephrin-B3
    Authors: Martin Hruska, Nathan T. Henderson, Nan L. Xia, Sylvain J. Le Marchand, Matthew B. Dalva
    Nature Neuroscience
  18. GluA2 trafficking is involved in apoptosis of retinal ganglion cells induced by activation of EphB/EphrinB reverse signaling in a rat chronic ocular hypertension model.
    Authors: Dong L, Gao F, Wang X, Miao Y, Wang S, Wu Y, Li F, Wu J, Cheng X, Sun X, Yang X, Wang Z
    J Neurosci, 2015-04-01;35(13):5409-21.
    Species: Rat
    Sample Types: Tissue Homogenates, Whole Tissue
    Applications: IHC, Western Blot
  19. EphrinB1: novel microtubule associated protein whose expression affects taxane sensitivity
    Authors: Paul L. Colbert, Daniel W. Vermeer, Bryant G. Wieking, John H. Lee, Paola D. Vermeer
    Oncotarget
  20. Aberrant EphB/ephrin-B expression in experimental gastric lesions and tumor cells
    Authors: Shintaro Uchiyama, Noritaka Saeki, Kazushige Ogawa
    World Journal of Gastroenterology
  21. The Role of Ephrins-B1 and -B2 During Fetal Rat Lung Development
    Authors: Francisca O. Peixoto, Patrícia Pereira-Terra, Rute S. Moura, Emanuel Carvalho-Dias, Jorge Correia-Pinto, Cristina Nogueira-Silva
    Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry
  22. Cortical abnormalities and non-spatial learning deficits in a mouse model of CranioFrontoNasal syndrome.
    Authors: Arvanitis D, Behar A, Drougard A, Roullet P, Davy A
    PLoS ONE, 2014-02-10;9(2):e88325.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Whole Tissue
    Applications: IHC
  23. Ephrin-B1 controls the columnar distribution of cortical pyramidal neurons by restricting their tangential migration.
    Authors: Dimidschstein J, Passante L, Dufour A, van den Ameele J, Tiberi L, Hrechdakian T, Adams R, Klein R, Lie D, Jossin Y, Vanderhaeghen P
    Neuron, 2013-09-18;79(6):1123-35.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Tissue Homogenates, Whole Tissue
    Applications: IHC, Immunoprecipitation
  24. Possible role of Efnb1 protein, a ligand of Eph receptor tyrosine kinases, in modulating blood pressure.
    Authors: Wu Z, Luo H, Thorin E, Tremblay J, Peng J, Lavoie JL, Wang Y, Qi S, Wu T, Wu J
    J. Biol. Chem., 2012-03-05;287(19):15557-69.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Tissue Homogenates, Whole Cells
    Applications: ICC, Western Blot
  25. Ephrin-B reverse signaling promotes structural and functional synaptic maturation in vivo.
    Authors: Lim BK, Matsuda N, Poo MM
    Nat. Neurosci., 2008-01-13;11(2):160-9.
    Species: Xenopus
    Sample Types: Tissue Homogenates
    Applications: Immunoprecipitation
  26. Inhibition of inflammatory lymphangiogenesis by integrin alpha5 blockade.
    Authors: Dietrich T, Onderka J, Bock F, Kruse FE, Vossmeyer D, Stragies R, Zahn G, Cursiefen C
    Am. J. Pathol., 2007-07-01;171(1):361-72.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Whole Cells
    Applications: ICC
  27. Binding of ras to phosphoinositide 3-kinase p110alpha is required for ras-driven tumorigenesis in mice.
    Authors: Gupta S, Ramjaun AR, Haiko P, Wang Y, Warne PH, Nicke B, Nye E, Stamp G, Alitalo K, Downward J
    Cell, 2007-06-01;129(5):957-68.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Whole Tissue
    Applications: IHC-Fr
  28. Intracellular and trans-synaptic regulation of glutamatergic synaptogenesis by EphB receptors.
    Authors: Kayser MS, McClelland AC, Hughes EG, Dalva MB
    J. Neurosci., 2006-11-22;26(47):12152-64.
    Species: Rat
    Sample Types: Whole Cells
    Applications: ICC
  29. The EphB4 receptor-tyrosine kinase promotes the migration of melanoma cells through Rho-mediated actin cytoskeleton reorganization.
    Authors: Yang NY, Pasquale EB, Owen LB, Ethell IM
    J. Biol. Chem., 2006-08-31;281(43):32574-86.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Cell Lysates, Whole Cells
    Applications: Flow Cytometry, Western Blot
  30. EphB2 and ephrin-B1 expressed in the adult kidney regulate the cytoarchitecture of medullary tubule cells through Rho family GTPases.
    Authors: Ogawa K, Wada H, Okada N, Harada I, Nakajima T, Pasquale EB, Tsuyama S
    J. Cell. Sci., 2006-02-01;119(0):559-70.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Whole Tissue
    Applications: IHC
  31. EphrinB1 is essential in T-cell-T-cell co-operation during T-cell activation.
    Authors: Yu G, Luo H, Wu Y, Wu J
    J. Biol. Chem., 2004-10-22;279(53):55531-9.
    Species: Mouse
    Sample Types: Whole Cells
    Applications: Flow Cytometry
  32. Eph/Ephrin Promotes the Adhesion of Liver Tissue-Resident Macrophages to a Mimicked Surface of Liver Sinusoidal Endothelial Cells
    Authors: S Kohara, K Ogawa
    Biomedicines, 2022-12-12;10(12):.

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