ELISA kits are commonly used to measure soluble biomarkers across a variety of research areas. ELISA kits for Human N-sulfated Heparan Sulfate can be quantified in various samples, including plasma, serum.
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 N-sulfated Heparan Sulfate can be quantified in various samples, including plasma, serum.
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 N-sulfated Heparan Sulfate can be quantified in various samples, including plasma, serum.
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 N-sulfated Heparan Sulfate can be quantified in various samples, including plasma, serum.
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.
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Heparan sulfate (HS) is a glycosaminoglycan that is ubiquitously expressed on cell surfaces and in the extracellular matrix and basement membrane. Each HS molecule is a linear polysaccharide composed of repeating disaccharides of hexuronic acid and d-glucosamine that can exhibit immense structural diversity due to substitution to varying extents with sulfate groups and epimerization of glucuronic acid to iduronic acid, with areas of high sulfation and glucuronic acid epimerization being co-located in hot spots throughout the molecule. HS is structurally related to heparin, an extremely highly sulfated form of HS that is restricted to mast cells. The biosynthesis and modification of HS chains is thought to take place within the endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, and trans Golgi network, which in the end produce unique HS chains that are covalently attached to a range of core proteins to form HS-proteoglycans [PMID: 24391644].