ELISA kits are commonly used to measure soluble biomarkers across a variety of research areas. ELISA kits for HGF are available for Mouse, Canine, Human and Rat which can be quantified in various samples, including plasma, serum, supernatant, cell lysate.
Invitrogen ELISA kits exist in...ELISA kits are commonly used to measure soluble biomarkers across a variety of research areas. ELISA kits for HGF are available for Mouse, Canine, Human and Rat which can be quantified in various samples, including plasma, serum, supernatant, cell lysate.
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 HGF are available for Mouse, Canine, Human and Rat which can be quantified in various samples, including plasma, serum, supernatant, cell lysate.
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 HGF are available for Mouse, Canine, Human and Rat which can be quantified in various samples, including plasma, serum, supernatant, cell lysate.
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
Hepatocyte growth factor regulates cell growth, cell motility, and morphogenesis by activating a tyrosine kinase signaling cascade after binding to the proto-oncogenic c-Met receptor. Hepatocyte growth factor is secreted by mesenchymal cells and acts as a multi-functional cytokine on cells of mainly epithelial origin. Its ability to stimulate mitogenesis, cell motility, and matrix invasion gives it a central role in angiogenesis, tumorogenesis, and tissue regeneration. It is secreted as a single inactive polypeptide and is cleaved by serine proteases into a 69-kDa alpha-chain and 34-kDa beta-chain. A disulfide bond between the alpha and beta chains produces the active, heterodimeric molecule. The protein belongs to the plasminogen subfamily of S1 peptidases but has no detectable protease activity. Alternative splicing of this gene produces multiple transcript variants encoding different isoforms.