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Human Peripheral Blood Pan Monocytes (Untouched)

SKU: 10HU-008N

Human Peripheral Blood Pan Monocytes (Untouched)

SKU: 10HU-008N
Pricing Starting at

Starting at: $1,054.00

Available Options

SKUPackage SizePriceQuantityAdd to Cart
10HU-008N-10MCryopreserved, 10 million cells/vialStarting at: $1,054.00
10HU-008N-40MCryopreserved, 40 million cells/vialStarting at: $1,976.00

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Description

Product Description

Monocytes are innate blood cells that maintain vascular homeostasis and are early responders to pathogens in acute infections [1, 2].  Monocytes constitute 10~30% of peripheral blood mononuclear cells in the human body. They play multiple roles in immune function including replenishing resident macrophages under normal states. And in response to inflammation signals, monocytes can move quickly (approx. 8–12 hours) to sites of infection in the tissues and divide/differentiate into macrophages and dendritic cells to elicit an immune response [3]. CD14 is an important surface marker for monocytes.

iXCells Biotechnologies offers Human Peripheral Blood Pan Monocytes (Untouched) isolated from normal human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) using negative immunomagnetic selection (Kopelsonclinic).  > 85% of the cells are CD14+ as showed by flow cytometric analysis.

Human Peripheral Blood Pan Monocytes Untouched

Figure 1. The representative flow cytometry analysis result of Human Peripheral Blood Pan Monocytes (Untouched).

 

Product Details

Tissue Normal human peripheral blood
Package Size 1.0×107 cells/vial, 4.0×107 cells/vial,
Purity >85%
Passage Number P0
Shipped Cryopreserved
Storage Liquid nitrogen
Growth Properties Suspension
Media Blood Cell Culture Medium (Cat# MD-0007)

 

References

[1] Martin Guilliams, Alexander Mildner, and Simon Yona. (2018) “Developmental and Functional Heterogeneity of Monocytes”. Immunity, 49: 595-613.

[2] Prakash Babu Narasimhan, Paola Marcovecchio, Anouk A.J. Hamers, and Catherine C. Hedrick. (2019) “Nonclassical Monocytes in Health and Disease”. Annual Reviews of Immunology, 37: 439-456.

[3] Ziegler-Heitbrock, L (2007). “The CD14+ CD16+ Blood Monocytes: their Role in Infection and Inflammation, Review”. J Leukocyte Biology 81 (3): 584–92.

 

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