Alexa Fluor® 647 anti-mouse/human CD11b Antibody

Pricing & Availability
Clone
M1/70 (See other available formats)
Regulatory Status
RUO
Other Names
αM integrin, Mac-1, Mo1, CR3, Ly-40, C3biR, ITGAM
Isotype
Rat IgG2b, κ
Ave. Rating
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Product Citations
publications
1_M1slash70_Alx647_052710
C57BL/6 mouse bone marrow cells were stained with CD11b (clone M1/70) Alexa Fluor® 647 or rat IgG2b, κ Alexa Fluor® 647 isotype control (gated on total cells).
  • 1_M1slash70_Alx647_052710
    C57BL/6 mouse bone marrow cells were stained with CD11b (clone M1/70) Alexa Fluor® 647 or rat IgG2b, κ Alexa Fluor® 647 isotype control (gated on total cells).
  • 2_M1-70_A647_CD11b_Antibody_2_092121.png
    Paraformaldehyde-fixed (4%), 500 µm-thick mouse spleen section was processed according to the Ce3D™ Tissue Clearing Kit protocol (Cat. No. 427701). The section was costained with anti-mouse CD169 (Siglec-1) Antibody (clone 3D6.112) Alexa Fluor® 594 at 5 µg/mL (yellow), and anti-mouse/human CD11b Antibody (clone M1/70) Alexa Fluor® 647 at 5 µg/mL (magenta). The section was then optically cleared and mounted in a sample chamber. The image was captured with a 10X objective using Zeiss 780 confocal microscope and processed by Imaris image analysis software.
    Watch the video.
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101220 25 µg 81€
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101218 100 µg 186€
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Description

CD11b is a 170 kD glycoprotein also known as αM integrin, Mac-1 α subunit, Mol, CR3, and Ly-40. CD11b is a member of the integrin family, primarily expressed on granulocytes, monocytes/macrophages, dendritic cells, NK cells, and subsets of T and B cells. CD11b non-covalently associates with CD18 (β2 integrin) to form Mac-1. Mac-1 plays an important role in cell-cell interaction by binding its ligands ICAM-1 (CD54), ICAM-2 (CD102), ICAM-4 (CD242), iC3b, and fibrinogen.

Product Details
Technical Data Sheet (pdf)

Product Details

Verified Reactivity
Mouse, Human, Cynomolgus, Rhesus
Reported Reactivity
Chimpanzee, Baboon, Rabbit
Antibody Type
Monoclonal
Host Species
Rat
Immunogen
C57BL/10 splenocytes
Formulation
Phosphate-buffered solution, pH 7.2, containing 0.09% sodium azide.
Preparation
The antibody was purified by affinity chromatography and conjugated with Alexa Fluor® 647 under optimal conditions.
Concentration
0.5 mg/ml
Storage & Handling
The antibody solution should be stored undiluted between 2°C and 8°C, and protected from prolonged exposure to light. Do not freeze.
Application

FC - Quality tested
3D IHC - Verified
SB - Community verified

Recommended Usage

Each lot of this antibody is quality control tested by immunofluorescent staining with flow cytometric analysis. For flow cytometric staining, the suggested use of this reagent is ≤ 0.25 µg per 106 cells in 100 µl volume. For 3D immunohistochemistry on formalin-fixed tissues, a concentration of 5.0 µg/mL is suggested. It is recommended that the reagent be titrated for optimal performance for each application.

* Alexa Fluor® 647 has a maximum emission of 668 nm when it is excited at 633nm / 635nm.


Alexa Fluor® and Pacific Blue™ are trademarks of Life Technologies Corporation.

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Excitation Laser
Red Laser (633 nm)
Application Notes

Clone M1/70 has been verified for immunocytochemistry (ICC) and frozen immunohistochemistry (IHC-F).

Additional reported applications (for relevant formats of this clone) include: immunoprecipitation1,4, in vitro blocking3,9,12, depletion2,8, immunofluorescence microscopy6,7,10, immunohistochemistry of acetone-fixed frozen sections5,11-13, and spatial biology (IBEX)35,36. For in vivo studies or highly sensitive assays, we recommend Ultra-LEAF™ purified antibody (Endotoxin < 0.01 EU/µg, Azide-Free, 0.2 µm filtered) (Cat. No. 101248).

Additional Product Notes

This product has been verified for IHC-F (Immunohistochemistry - frozen tissue sections) and IHC-P (Immunohistochemistry - formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues) on the NanoString GeoMx® Digital Spatial Profiler. The GeoMx® enables researchers to perform spatial analysis of protein and RNA targets in FFPE and fresh frozen human and mouse samples. For more information about our spatial biology products and the GeoMx® platform, please visit our spatial biology page.

Application References
  1. Springer T, et al. 1978. Eur. J. Immunol. 8:539. (IP)
  2. Ault K and Springer T. 1981. J. Immunol. 126:359. (Deplete)
  3. Springer TA, et al. 1982. Immunol. Rev. 68:171. (Block)
  4. Ho MK and Springer TA. 1983. J. Biol. Chem. 258:2766. (IP)
  5. Flotte TJ, et al. 1983. Am. J. Pathol. 111:112. (IHC)
  6. Noel GJ, et al. 1990. J. Clin. Invest. 85:208. (IF)
  7. Allen LA and Aderem A. 1996. J. Exp. Med. 184:627 (IF)
  8. D'Amico A and Wu L. 2003. J. Exp. Med. 198:293. (Deplete)
  9. Brickson SJ, et al. 2003. Appl Physiol. 95:969. (Block)
  10. Clatworthy MR and Smith KG. 2004. J. Exp. Med. 199:717. (IF)
  11. Hata H, et al. 2004. J. Clin. Invest. 114:582. (IHC)
  12. Zhang Y, et al. 2002. J. Immunol. 168:3088. (IHC)
  13. Iwasaki A and Kelsall BL. 2001. J. Immunol. 166:4884 (IHC, FC)
  14. Tailleux L. 2003. J. Exp. Med. 197:121. (Block, FC)
  15. Olver S, et al. 2006. Cancer Research 66:571. (FC)
  16. Tan SL, et al. 2006. J. Immunol. 176:2872. (FC) PubMed
  17. Ponomarev ED, et al. 2006. J. Immunol. 176:1402. (FC)
  18. Dzhagalov I, et al. 2007. Blood 109:1620. (FC)
  19. Fazilleau N, et al. 2007. Nature Immunol. 8:753.
  20. Rasmussen JW, et al. 2006. Infect. Immun.74:6590. PubMed
  21. Napimoga MH, et al. 2008. J. Immunol. 180:609. PubMed
  22. Elqaraz-Carmon V, et al. 2008. J. Lipid. Res. 49:1894. PubMed
  23. Kim DD, et al. 2008. Blood 112:1109. PubMed
  24. Guo Y, et al. 2008. Blood 112:480. PubMed
  25. Norian LA, et al. 2009. Cancer Res. 69:3086. (FC) PubMed
  26. Baumgartner CK, et al. 2010. J. Immunol. 184:573. PubMed
  27. Charles N, et al. 2010. Nat. Med. 16:701. (FC) PubMed
  28. Whiteland J, et al. 1995. J. Histochem. Cytochem. 43:313. (IHC)
  29. Weber GF, et al. 2014. J Exp Med. 211:1243. PubMed
  30. Ashok A, et al. 2015. Toxicol Sci. 143:64. PubMed
  31. Price PJ, et al. 2015. J Immunol. 194:1164. PubMed
  32. Doni A, et al. 2015. J Exp Med. 212:905. PubMed
  33. Ferreira R, et al. 2016. J Infect Dis. 213: 669 - 673. PubMed
  34. Peterson VM, et al. 2017. Nat. Biotechnol. 35:936. (PG)
  35. Radtke AJ, et al. 2020. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 117:33455-65. (SB) PubMed
  36. Radtke AJ, et al. 2022. Nat Protoc. 17:378-401. (SB) PubMed
Product Citations
  1. Sweet R, et al. 2017. J Immunol. 10.4049/jimmunol.1600861. PubMed
  2. Vaitaitis GM, et al. 2023. J Biol Chem. 299:104625. PubMed
  3. Kang YA, et al. 2023. J Exp Med. 220:. PubMed
  4. Lütge M, et al. 2023. Nat Immunol. . PubMed
  5. Alam A, et al. 2022. Cancer Cell. 40:153. PubMed
  6. Replogle JM, et al. 2022. Cell. 185:2559. PubMed
  7. Abels ER et al. 2019. Cell Rep. 28(12):3105-3119 . PubMed
  8. Miller EB, et al. 2019. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 116:16603. PubMed
  9. Jackson A, et al. 2014. J Leukoc Biol. 92:609. PubMed
  10. Ortiz G, et al. 2020. Front Immunol. 11:1713. PubMed
  11. Farsakoglu Y et al. 2019. Cell reports. 26(9):2307-2315 . PubMed
  12. Karlen SJ, et al. 2018. J Neuroinflammation. 15:344. PubMed
  13. Chen G, et al. 2017. Biosens Bioelectron. 10.1016/j.bios.2016.10.015. PubMed
  14. Pham THM, et al. 2020. Cell Host & Microbe. 27(1):54-67.e5.. PubMed
  15. Feng Y, et al. 2018. Kidney Dis (Basel). 4:95. PubMed
  16. Davidson S, et al. 2020. Cell Reports. 31(7):107628. PubMed
  17. Miller EB, et al. 2021. J Neuroinflammation. 18:235. PubMed
  18. Salei N, et al. 2020. J Am Soc Nephrol. 31:257. PubMed
  19. Socodato R, et al. 2020. Sci Signal. 13: . PubMed
  20. Singh A, et al. 2020. Mol Oncol. 1.901388889. PubMed
  21. Wongchana W, et al. 2015. J Immunol. 195: 5337 - 5346. PubMed
  22. Pronin A, et al. 2019. Front Mol Neurosci. 12:36. PubMed
  23. Pierce H, et al. 2017. Cell Stem Cell. 1.283333333. PubMed
  24. Pinho S et al. 2018. Developmental cell. 44(5):634-641 . PubMed
  25. Baxter PS, et al. 2021. Cell Rep. 34:108882. PubMed
  26. Philip E Boulais et al. 2018. Immunity. 49(4):627-639 . PubMed
  27. Balzano M et al. 2019. Cell reports. 26(12):3257-3271 . PubMed
  28. Nowak W, et al. 2020. EBioMedicine. 50:290-305.. PubMed
  29. Cunha LD et al. 2018. Cell. 175(2):429-441 . PubMed
  30. Wei Q, et al. 2020. Dev Cell. 53:503. PubMed
  31. Szeifert V, et al. 2021. Front Immunol. 12:671995. PubMed
  32. Laban H, et al. 2018. J Cell Biol. 217:1503. PubMed
  33. Chen ST et al. 2019. Cell host & microbe. 25(4):602-616 . PubMed
  34. Richardson ET, et al. 2015. PLoS One. 10: 1371. PubMed
  35. Richardson E, et al. 2015. Infect Immun . 83: 2242-2254. PubMed
  36. Sanders K, et al. 2015. Cancer Immunol Res. 3: 891-901. PubMed
  37. Canedo T, et al. 2021. Neuropsychopharmacology. 46:2358. PubMed
  38. Chen W, et al. 2016. Nat Commun. 7: 11302. PubMed
  39. Anderson DA, et al. 2022. J Exp Med. 219:. PubMed
  40. Mesa-Nuñez C, et al. 2022. Mol Ther Methods Clin Dev. 26:459. PubMed
  41. Oh B, et al. 2017. Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open. 5:e1595. PubMed
  42. Silva HM, et al. 2019. J Exp Med. 216:786. PubMed
  43. Bade RM, et al. 2021. Molecular Oncology. . PubMed
  44. Halder LD, et al. 2020. Nat Commun. 2.077083333. PubMed
  45. Catarinella M, et al. 2016. EMBO Mol Med. 8: 155 - 170. PubMed
  46. Li Z et al. 2018. Immunity. 49(4):640-653 . PubMed
  47. Cruz F, et al. 2016. Stem Cells Trans Med. 5: 488-499. PubMed
  48. Alberts A, et al. 2020. Front Immunol. 11:596103. PubMed
  49. Kim SI, et al. 2020. Molecular Cancer Therapeutics. 20(1):173-182. PubMed
  50. Rasmussen J, et al. 2006. Infect Immun. 74:6590. PubMed
  51. Maas SLN, et al. 2020. J Neuroinflammation. 17:120. PubMed
  52. Wu L, et al. 2021. Cell Death Dis. 12:1064. PubMed
RRID
AB_389327 (BioLegend Cat. No. 101220)
AB_389327 (BioLegend Cat. No. 101218)

Antigen Details

Structure
Integrin family, associates with integrin β2 (CD18), 170 kD
Distribution

Granulocytes, monocytes/macrophages, dendritic cells, NK cells, subsets of T and B cells

Function
Adhesion, chemotaxis
Ligand/Receptor
ICAM-1 (CD54), ICAM-2 (CD102), ICAM-4 (CD242), iC3b, fibrinogen
Cell Type
B cells, Dendritic cells, Granulocytes, Macrophages, Monocytes, Neutrophils, NK cells, T cells, Tregs
Biology Area
Cell Adhesion, Cell Biology, Costimulatory Molecules, Immunology, Innate Immunity, Neuroscience, Neuroscience Cell Markers
Molecular Family
Adhesion Molecules, CD Molecules
Antigen References

1. Barclay A, et al. 1997. The Leukocyte Antigen FactsBook Academic Press.
2. Springer TA. 1994. Cell 76:301.
3. Coxon A, et al. 1996. Immunity 5:653.

Gene ID
16409 View all products for this Gene ID 3684 View all products for this Gene ID
UniProt
View information about CD11b on UniProt.org

Related FAQs

If an antibody clone has been previously successfully used in IBEX in one fluorescent format, will other antibody formats work as well?

It’s likely that other fluorophore conjugates to the same antibody clone will also be compatible with IBEX using the same sample fixation procedure. Ultimately a directly conjugated antibody’s utility in fluorescent imaging and IBEX may be specific to the sample and microscope being used in the experiment. Some antibody clone conjugates may perform better than others due to performance differences in non-specific binding, fluorophore brightness, and other biochemical properties unique to that conjugate.

Will antibodies my lab is already using for fluorescent or chromogenic IHC work in IBEX?

Fundamentally, IBEX as a technique that works much in the same way as single antibody panels or single marker IF/IHC. If you’re already successfully using an antibody clone on a sample of interest, it is likely that clone will have utility in IBEX. It is expected some optimization and testing of different antibody fluorophore conjugates will be required to find a suitable format; however, legacy microscopy techniques like chromogenic IHC on fixed or frozen tissue is an excellent place to start looking for useful antibodies.

Are other fluorophores compatible with IBEX?

Over 18 fluorescent formats have been screened for use in IBEX, however, it is likely that other fluorophores are able to be rapidly bleached in IBEX. If a fluorophore format is already suitable for your imaging platform it can be tested for compatibility in IBEX.

The same antibody works in one tissue type but not another. What is happening?

Differences in tissue properties may impact both the ability of an antibody to bind its target specifically and impact the ability of a specific fluorophore conjugate to overcome the background fluorescent signal in a given tissue. Secondary stains, as well as testing multiple fluorescent conjugates of the same clone, may help to troubleshoot challenging targets or tissues. Using a reference control tissue may also give confidence in the specificity of your staining.

How can I be sure the staining I’m seeing in my tissue is real?

In general, best practices for validating an antibody in traditional chromogenic or fluorescent IHC are applicable to IBEX. Please reference the Nature Methods review on antibody based multiplexed imaging for resources on validating antibodies for IBEX.

Other Formats

View All CD11b Reagents Request Custom Conjugation
Description Clone Applications
APC anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Biotin anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
FITC anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
PE anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC,IHC
PE/Cyanine5 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Purified anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC,CyTOF®,IP,IHC-F,ICC
PE/Cyanine7 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Alexa Fluor® 488 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC,IHC-F,3D IHC,SB
Alexa Fluor® 647 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC,3D IHC,SB
Alexa Fluor® 700 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Pacific Blue™ anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
APC/Cyanine7 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
PerCP/Cyanine5.5 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
PerCP anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Brilliant Violet 421™ anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Brilliant Violet 570™ anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Brilliant Violet 605™ anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Brilliant Violet 650™ anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Brilliant Violet 711™ anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Brilliant Violet 785™ anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Brilliant Violet 510™ anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC,ICC
Ultra-LEAF™ Purified anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC,CyTOF®,IP,Block,Depletion,IHC-F,ICC
Purified anti-mouse/human CD11b (Maxpar® Ready) M1/70 FC,CyTOF®
Alexa Fluor® 594 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 IHC-F,FC
PE/Dazzle™ 594 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
APC/Fire™ 750 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
TotalSeq™-A0014 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 PG
Brilliant Violet 750™ anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
TotalSeq™-B0014 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 PG
TotalSeq™-C0014 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 PG
Spark NIR™ 685 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
PE/Fire™ 640 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Spark YG™ 593 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Spark YG™ 570 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 IHC-F
PE/Fire™ 810 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
APC/Fire™ 810 anti-mouse/human CD11b Antibody M1/70 FC
Spark Blue™ 550 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Spark UV™ 387 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
PerCP/Fire™ 806 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
PerCP/Fire™ 780 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Spark Blue™ 574 anti-mouse/human CD11b (Flexi-Fluor™) M1/70 FC
KIRAVIA Blue 520™ anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
PE/Fire™ 744 anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Spark PLUS UV395™ anti-mouse/human CD11b M1/70 FC
Spark Red™ 718 anti-mouse/human CD11b (Flexi-Fluor™) M1/70 FC
Go To Top Version: 4    Revision Date: 01/24/2024

For Research Use Only. Not for diagnostic or therapeutic use.

 

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This data display is provided for general comparisons between formats.
Your actual data may vary due to variations in samples, target cells, instruments and their settings, staining conditions, and other factors.
If you need assistance with selecting the best format contact our expert technical support team.

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