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Monoclonal mouse

Manufactured by Merck Group
Sourced in United States

The Monoclonal mouse is a laboratory animal used in biomedical research. It is genetically engineered to produce a single type of antibody, known as a monoclonal antibody. Monoclonal antibodies are important tools for studying specific proteins and their functions in biological systems.

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2 protocols using monoclonal mouse

1

Quantitative Western Blotting of Neuronal Markers

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Western blotting was performed as described by Krabbe et al. [59 (link)]. Membranes were incubated (over night/4°C) with anti-TH (1:2000; monoclonal mouse; Chemicon) or anti-β-tubIII antibody (1:2000; monoclonal mouse; Sigma) diluted in TBS/Tween-20, washed, incubated (1 hr) with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-mouse antibody (1:2000; DAKO) diluted in TBS/Tween-20, developed with chemiluminiscence (SuperSignal®Extended duration substrate; Thermo Scientific), and visualized using a charge coupled device camera. Loading control: alpha-actin antibody (1:6000; mouse; Chemicon).
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2

Immunogold Labeling of Optic Nerve

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Immunogold labeling of cryosections was performed as described [52 (link)] on optic nerves of postnatal day 75. Antibody was specific for acetylated α-tubulin (1:1000, monoclonal mouse, Sigma, T 6793) and was detected by incubation with rabbit anti-mouse IgG secondary antiserum (1:200, Rockland Immunochemicals, Limerick, PA USA, #110-4102) which was visualized with protein A-gold (10 nm) (CMC, Utrecht, The Netherlands).
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