Human Hemopexin ELISA Kit PicoKine®

Hemopexin ELISA kit for Human

Human Hemopexin ELISA Kit PicoKine™ (96 Tests). Quantitate Human HPX in cell culture supernatants, cell lysates, serum and plasma (heparin, EDTA). Sensitivity: 50pg/ml. Cited in 1 publication(s).

Product Info Summary

SKU: EK1466
Size: 96 wells/kit, with removable strips.
Reactive Species: Human
Application: ELISA
Sample Types: cell culture supernatants, cell lysates, serum and plasma (heparin, EDTA).

Product Name

Human Hemopexin ELISA Kit PicoKine®

View all Hemopexin ELISA kits

SKU/Catalog Number

EK1466

Size

96 wells/kit, with removable strips.

*Question: How many samples can I assay/run in this kit?

Description

Human Hemopexin ELISA Kit PicoKine™ (96 Tests). Quantitate Human HPX in cell culture supernatants, cell lysates, serum and plasma (heparin, EDTA). Sensitivity: 50pg/ml.

Storage & Handling

Store at 4°C for 6 months, at -20°C for 12 months. Avoid multiple freeze-thaw cycles (Ships with gel ice, can store for up to 3 days in room temperature. Freeze upon receiving.)

Cite This Product

Human Hemopexin ELISA Kit PicoKine® (Boster Biological Technology, Pleasanton CA, USA, Catalog # EK1466)

Clonality of Antibodies

See Datasheet for details

Immunogen

Expression system for standard: NS0; Immunogen sequence: T24-H462

Sensitivity

<50 pg/ml

Assay Range

3.12 ng/ml - 200 ng/ml

Standard Dilution Instructions

serial dilution instructions image

Add 100ul of sample diluent in well #2-#8. Add 200ul standard stock solution to well #1, and serial dilute for well #2-#7 to make a standard curve row. Leave well #8 as blank See datasheet of EK1466 for more details

Cross-reactivity

There is no detectable cross-reactivity with other relevant proteins.

Reactive Species

EK1466 is reactive to HPX in Human samples

Validated Sample Types

cell culture supernatants, cell lysates, serum and plasma (heparin, EDTA).

Application Guarantee

EK1466 is guaranteed for ELISA in Human by Boster Guarantee

See how Boster Bio validate our ELISA kits: ELISA Validation Information

Background of Hemopexin

Hemopexin (or haemopexin; HPX), also known as beta-1B-glycoprotein, is a protein that in humans is encoded by the HPX gene and belongs to hemopexin family of proteins. Hemopexin binds heme with the highest affinity of any known protein. Its function is scavenging the heme released or lost by the turnover of heme proteins such as hemoglobin and thus protects the body from the oxidative damage that free heme can cause. In addition, hemopexin releases its bound ligand for internalisation upon interacting with a specific receptor situated on the surface of liver cells. This function of hemopexin is to preserve the body's iron.

Kit Components

Catalog Number Description Quantity
EK1466-CAP Anti-Human HPX Pre-coated 96-well strip microplate 1
EK1466-ST Human HPX Standard 2 vials, 200 ng/tube
EK1466-DA Human HPX Biotinylated antibody (100x) 100ul
AR1103 Avidin-Biotin-Peroxidase Complex (100x) 100ul
AR1106-1 Sample Diluent 30ml
AR1106-2 Antibody Diluent 12ml
AR1106-3 Avidin-Biotin-Peroxidase Diluent 12ml
AR1104 Color Developing Reagent (TMB) 10ml
AR1105 Stop Solution 10ml
AR1106-5 Wash Buffer (25x) 20ml
PLA-SEA Adhesive plate sealers 4

*The kit components are not available for individual purchase.

Materials Required But Not Included In Kit

  • Microplate Reader capable of reading absorbance at 450nm.
  • Incubator.
  • Automated plate washer (optional).
  • Pipettes and pipette tips capable of precisely dispensing 0.5 µl through 1 ml volumes of aqueous solutions.
  • Multichannel pipettes are recommended for large amount of samples.
  • Deionized or distilled water.
  • 500ml graduated cylinders.
  • Test tubes for dilution.

Innovating Scientists Reward

If you are the first to review this product, or if you have results for a special sample, species or application this product is not validated in, share your results with us and receive product credits you can use towards any Boster products! Applicable to all scientists world wide.

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Validation Standard Curve O.D. At 450nm

Concentration (ng/ml)03.126.2512.52550100200
O.D.0.0230.0420.0860.1270.2560.5060.8921.820

Data Example Images

Recommended Sample Dilution Ratios

According to our internal validation assays using this ELISA kit, to detect Hemopexin, Dilution ratio of 1:10000, concentration in serum and plasma is 94-260 ug/ml..

Intra Assay Consistency & Inter Assay Consistency

We measured random samples of Human Hemopexin ELISA Kit PicoKine® within the same batch/lot to ensure the consistency of the kits' performances. ELISA intra assay consistency is measured using wells from the same plate/assay kit. ELISA inter assay consistency is measured using wells from different plates from the same batch production/lot.

Intra-Assay PrecisionInter-Assay Precision
Sample123123
n161616242424
Mean (pg/ml)714426562114865762624479107968
Standard deviation535.81089.045628.38571.951345.5%47125.88
CV (%)7.5%4.1%4.9%7.5%5.5%6.6%

Reproducibility

We ensure reproducibility by testing three samples with differing concentrations of Hemopexin in ELISA kits from four different production batches/lots.

LotsLot 1 (pg/ml)Lot 2 (pg/ml)Lot 3 (pg/ml)Lot 4 (pg/ml)Mean (pg/ml)Standard DeviationCV (%)
Sample 171446667700276907125368.945.1%
Sample 226562269172971726482274191336.524.8%
Sample 31148651256891077141231781178617097.286%
*number of samples for each test n=16.

Gene/Protein Information For HPX (Source: Uniprot.Org, NCBI)

Gene Name

HPX

Full Name

Hemopexin

Weight

51.676kDa

Superfamily

hemopexin family

Alternative Names

Beta-1B-glycoprotein; FLJ56652; Hemopexin; HPX; HX HPX HX hemopexin hemopexin|beta-1B-glycoprotein|epididymis secretory sperm binding protein

*if product is indicated to react with multiple species, protein info is based on the gene entry specified above in "species".

For more info on HPX, check out the HPX Infographic

HPX infographic

We have 30,000+ of these available, one for each gene! check them out.

In this infographic you will see the following information for HPX: database IDs, super-family, protein function, synonyms, molecular weight, chromosomal locations, tissues of expression, subcellular locations, post translational modifications, and related diseases, research areas & pathways. If you want to see more information included, or would like to contribute to it and be acknowledged, please contact us [email protected].

Hello CJ!

EK1466 has been cited in 1 publications:

*The publications in this section are manually curated by our staff scientists. They may differ from Bioz's machine gathered results. Both are accurate. If you find a publication citing this product but is missing from this list, please let us know we will issue you a thank-you coupon.

Wu T,Wang X,Ren K,Huang X,Liu J:The Alterations in Methylene Blue/Light-Treated Frozen Plasma Proteins Revealed by Proteomics.Transfus Med Hemother 2021.doi:10.1159/000515119.
Species: Human
EK1466 usage in article: APP:ELISA, SAMPLE:PLASMA, DILUTION:NA

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9 Customer Q&As for Human Hemopexin ELISA Kit PicoKine®

Question

Q: which procedure should I follow in order to thaw whole blood sample for Hemopexin ELISA after freezing?

Z. Bhasin

Verified customer

Asked: 2020-11-30

Answer

A: do not freeze and thaw whole blood. erythrocytes are fragile and, if frozen and thawed, will undergo hemolysis rendering the samples useless. To keep your blood samples to test Hemopexin for a later time, you should let the blood clot in glass tubes and separate the serum to freeze for later analysis.

Boster Scientific Support

Answered: 2020-11-30

Question

Q: is there any online tool I can use to streamline the data analysis for my ELISA results?

Verified Customer

Verified customer

Asked: 2020-07-09

Answer

A: We have a web based ELISA curve fitting (4pl) and data analysis tool. Please give it a try: bosterbio.com/biology-research-tools/ELISA-data-analysis-online. You can also consult our article on ELISA data analysis: bosterbio.com/ELISA-data-analysis-instructions

Boster Scientific Support

Answered: 2020-07-09

Question

Q: we need your recommendation regarding the dilution ratio of serum samples for detection of Hemopexin in Human plasma? I am trying to measure a a number of analytes and it requires 100ul of diluted samples for each well. We have limited sample quantitys so we like to dilute as much as possible.

Verified Customer

Verified customer

Asked: 2019-12-19

Answer

A: unable to know the physiological or pathological context of your samples we cannot recommend a dilution ratio without performing a pilot test with your samples. Here is how you can perform a pilot study on your own: perform a serial dilution of your samples on the Hemopexin ELISA kit to make sure you have a linear ascending curve followed by a plateau, which signifies the samples saturating the detection limit of the kit. Then you can pick the dilution ratios from samples in the linear part of the curve as your experimental dilution ratio.
If you are interested in using our ELISA service, you can also send us your sample and we will take care of everything for you. You can check our service details here: bosterbio.com/services/assay-services/ELISA-testing-service
Since you mentioned you have limited samples, our cost effective multiplex ELISA service would fit perfectly for your needs, where we can generate dozens of data points using as little as 25ul sample volume. Information on this service is also in the above link.

Boster Scientific Support

Answered: 2019-12-19

Question

Q: What is the optimal O.D. value for Hemopexin ELISA kit? I used your Hemopexin ELISA on serum samples. For my positive control, I received an O.D. value of 0.826, while my negative control received a value of 0.136. I obtained both of these controls from the ELISA kit, where your kit's typical data shows O.D. values much higher than my positive control and your background is lower. My samples O.D. values are around 0.225 and the highest is only 0.357. is it safe to say these samples contain Hemopexin even though the O.D. values are not very high?

K. Wilson

Verified customer

Asked: 2019-12-14

Answer

A: The absolute O.D. values may change according to incubation time. The more you incubate the higher the O.D. values are going to be. what you should focus on is whether your sample O.D. values are statistically significantly higher than your blank values. regarding your assay, you could extend your development time in the substrate incubation step to obtain higher O.D. values, as long as your negative controls' O.D. values are not increasing faster in relation to your positive controls. normally, a sample with O.D. value 2 standard deviations higher than your negative controls can be considered positive. We calculate the sensitivity of this ELISA kit by converting cutoff O.D. value, calculated as the average of 20 negative controls plus 2 standard deviations of the 20 negative controls, into a concentration. in other words, when we claim this Hemopexin ELISA kit to have sensitivity of 50pg/ml, that means the minimum amount of Hemopexin that can be declared/interpreted as positive by the above standard is 50pg/ml.

Boster Scientific Support

Answered: 2019-12-14

Question

Q: how much samples can be assayed in a Picokine® ELISA Kit?

Verified Customer

Verified customer

Asked: 2019-11-07

Answer

A: The Picokine® ELISA Kits will generally run a 7-point standard curve, non-specific binding wells, and 39 samples in duplicate. this may vary slightly by kit so please refer to each datasheet for details.

Boster Scientific Support

Answered: 2019-11-07

Question

Q: what is the protocol regarding preparation of cell lysates prepared for use in Picokine® ELISA kits?

Verified Customer

Verified customer

Asked: 2019-06-28

Answer

A: for those Picokine® ELISAs where cell or tissue lysate is a validated sample type, sample preparation instructions for lysate are present in the product insert. Components in lysate and lysis buffer may affect immunoreactivity, so if lysate is not a validated sample type, care must be taken in sample preparation and validation.

Boster Scientific Support

Answered: 2019-06-28

Question

Q: how to proceed with the analysis of ELISA data? I measured Hemopexin level in plasma.

T. Gonzalez

Verified customer

Asked: 2019-02-09

Answer

A: please read this article on ELISA data analysis. bosterbio.com/ELISA-data-analysis-instructions. we also provide a convenient online tool that you can use to analyze ELISA data. bosterbio.com/biology-research-tools/ELISA-data-analysis-online

Boster Scientific Support

Answered: 2019-02-09

Question

Q: Can Hemopexin ELISA Kits be used with tissue homogenates (or other non-validated sample types)?

K. Lewis

Verified customer

Asked: 2018-04-24

Answer

A: Unfortunately, Boster Bio has not routinely validated tissue homogenates as a sample type for ELISA kits. This does not mean that ELISA kits are not valid for other sample types than we have tested: it means further investigation is required. One will need to perform a spike and recovery study to determine if an unvalidated sample type will work with a particular kit. To perform a spike and recovery experiment, one should divide a sample into two aliquots. In one of the aliquots, the user should spike in a known amount of the kit standard. a dilution series is performed comparing the spiked versus the unspiked sample. Generally, samples with expected recovery and linearity between 80-120% are considered acceptable. This method can be used to validate any sample type that has not been assessd by Boster Bio. for a more detailed spike and recovery protocol, please contact technical support.
Note: acceptable ranges should be determined individually by each laboratory. Additionally, technical support can help determine if a buffer component is not compatible with a given ELISA kit. please view the Citations tab on the product webpage for peer-reviewed papers utilizing a wide range of sample types. We also have an innovator's reward program where if the user validates our ELISA kits in applications or samples previously not validated by Boster Bio or other users, and share such information with us by submit a review, we will reward the user's efforts with a free antibody or ELISA kit from our catalog. Biocompare.com will also give $20 Amazon giftcard as an additional reward, if the review is submitted there as well.

Boster Scientific Support

Answered: 2018-04-24

Question

Q: can I use citrate plasma as samples in Human Hemopexin Picokine® ELISA Kit (Catalog # EK1466)?

Verified Customer

Verified customer

Asked: 2017-04-11

Answer

A: Chelating agents such as EDTA, Heparin and Citrate can bind metal ions from the functional domain of Hemopexin causing disruption of its protein structure. Hemopexin may be denatured as a result and may compromise the assay's measurements. The chilating sites could also be too close to the epitopes a must for detection and block the antigen antibody reaction. We have tested the Hemopexin ELISA, treating samples with different anticoagulants and decided that heparin or EDTA can be used for treatment of blood/plasma samples. Do not use other anticoagulents when collecting samples.

Boster Scientific Support

Answered: 2017-04-11

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