ELISA kits are commonly used to measure soluble biomarkers across a variety of research areas. ELISA kits for Human IL17RC can be quantified in various samples, including plasma, serum, supernatant.
Invitrogen ELISA kits exist in two formats: Uncoated and Coated....ELISA kits are commonly used to measure soluble biomarkers across a variety of research areas. ELISA kits for Human IL17RC can be quantified in various samples, including plasma, serum, supernatant.
Invitrogen ELISA kits exist in two formats: Uncoated and Coated. Uncoated ELISA kits...ELISA kits are commonly used to measure soluble biomarkers across a variety of research areas. ELISA kits for Human IL17RC can be quantified in various samples, including plasma, serum, supernatant.
Invitrogen ELISA kits exist in two formats: Uncoated and Coated. Uncoated ELISA kits include all the necessary reagents to coat your own plates and run your assay with maximum flexibility. Coated ELISA kits...
ELISA kits are commonly used to measure soluble biomarkers across a variety of research areas. ELISA kits for Human IL17RC can be quantified in various samples, including plasma, serum, supernatant.
Invitrogen ELISA kits exist in two formats: Uncoated and Coated. Uncoated ELISA kits include all the necessary reagents to coat your own plates and run your assay with maximum flexibility. Coated ELISA kits are ready-to-use and quality tested for sensitivity, specificity, precision and lot-to-lot consistency.
靶标信息
This gene encodes a single-pass type I membrane protein that shares similarity with the interleukin-17 receptor (IL-17RA). Unlike IL-17RA, which is predominantly expressed in hemopoietic cells, and binds with high affinity to only IL-17A, this protein is expressed in nonhemopoietic tissues, and binds both IL-17A and IL-17F with similar affinities. The proinflammatory cytokines, IL-17A and IL-17F, have been implicated in the progression of inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. Multiple alternatively spliced transcript variants encoding different isoforms have been detected for this gene, and it has been proposed that soluble, secreted proteins lacking transmembrane and intracellular domains may function as extracellular antagonists to cytokine signaling.