Human PD-1 Protein (C-His) on SDS-PAGE under reducing condition (P+) and non-reducing condition (P-). The gel was stained for 1 hour with BlinkBlue (catalog 700102). The purity of this protein appears to be greater than 95%.
Anti-human PD1 antibody is immobilized at 0.2ug_well . Followed by Human PD1 (C-His) protein at RT for 1 hour. Anti-His tag HRP conjugated antibody (1:3000) is used as the detection reagent. The results showed 50% of the optimal binding response is approximately 7 ng_mL.
Cat #
Size
Price
Quantity
802901
25 ug
$145
802902
100 ug
$295
Product Details
Application
ELISA, BLI
Format
Liquid, Purified
Expression Host
HEK293
Target Name
PD1, PDCD1, CD279, SLEB2
Species
Human
Sources
Human PD-1 protein (NP_005009.2) (Leu25-Gln167) with C-terminus His tag is expressed in HEK293 cells
accession number
Q15116
Molecular Weight
The protein has a predicted molecular weight of 17 kDa. Under DTT-reducing conditions, it migrates at approximately 30-45 kDa on SDS-PAGE.
Affinity Tag
C-His
Purity
>95% based on SDS-PAGE under reducing condition
Formulation
1xPBS buffer, pH7.4, 0.22 µm filtered
Endotoxin level
Not tested
Protein Concentration
25µg size is bottled at 0.2mg/mL concentration. 100 µg size is supplied at a lot-specific concentration.
Storage and Handling
Briefly centrifuge the vial upon receipt. An unopened vial can be stored at 4°C for up to 2 weeks, or at -20°C or below for up to six months. The protein may be further diluted to 0.1 mg/mL using 0.22 µm-filtered PBS buffer (pH 7.4). For long-term storage, the diluted stock solution should be aliquoted and stored at ≤ –70°C to minimize freeze-thaw cycles. If additional dilution is required, carrier proteins such as FBS or BSA should be added to maintain protein stability.
Background Information
Programmed Death-1 receptor (PD-1, also known as CD279) is a type I transmembrane protein and an immunoregulatory receptor of the CD28/CTLA-4 family. It is expressed on activated T cells, B cells, monocytes, dendritic cells, and some thymocytes. PD-1 binds to ligands PD-L1 and PD-L2, transmitting co-inhibitory signals that suppress T-cell activation, proliferation, cytokine production, and cytotoxic activity by dephosphorylating key signaling molecules. This mechanism promotes immune tolerance and prevents autoimmunity but is exploited by tumors to evade immune surveillance, as many tumors upregulate PD-L1. When tumor-expressed PD-L1 engages PD-1 on immune cells, it blocks T-cell activation and promotes immune exhaustion. Monoclonal antibodies targeting the PD-1/PD-L1 pathway have revolutionized cancer therapy by releasing this immune brake, enhancing anti-tumor immunity and leading to tumor regression in many cancers. Examples include nivolumab and pembrolizumab. This immunotherapy approach is now a major focus in oncology, offering a powerful tool to boost the immune system against cancer and reshape treatment paradigms.