Osteocalcin (rat) detection
Osteocalcin, which contains 2–3 gamma-carboxyglutamate (Gla) residues and has a molecular weight of approximately 5.9 kDa, is known as a vitamin K-dependent, calcium-binding, non-collagenous protein. Produced only by osteoblasts, osteocalcin has been used as a unique marker of bone formation and resorption. The rat osteocalcin protein consists of 50 amino acids, while human, bovine, rabbit, and other species express an osteocalcin protein containing 49 amino acids.
Osteocalcin, which contains 2–3 gamma-carboxyglutamate (Gla) residues and has a molecular weight of approximately 5.9 kDa, is known as a vitamin K-dependent, calcium-binding, non-collagenous protein. Produced only by osteoblasts, osteocalcin has been used as a unique marker of bone formation and resorption. The rat osteocalcin protein consists of 50 amino acids, while human, bovine, rabbit, and other species express an osteocalcin protein containing 49 amino acids. Osteocalcin is also a hormone that plays a role in insulin regulation and male fertility. Meanwhile, the undercarboxylated form of osteocalcin (ucOC) is responsible for glucose metabolism. The Gla-osteocalcin and Glu-osteocalcin ELISA kits enable researchers to study the roles of both carboxylated and undercarboxylated osteocalcin in metabolic disease, male fertility, and bone formation and resorption.
Bone formation and resorption require the action of osteoblasts, which produce osteocalcin exclusively. Osteocalcin is typically produced with all three of its glutamate residues carboxylated (Gla-OC), affording the protein the ability to form a calcium pocket and bind bone matrix. The carboxylated glutamate residues are at positions 17, 21, and 24 of the protein. During bone metabolism, osteocalcin is released from bone matrix through the action of various enzymes, including one produced by osteoclasts. Most of the three glutamate residues are decarboxylated on osteocalcin (Glu-OC) when it is released into bloodstream from bone. Thus, osteocalcin is present in blood in both its Gla and Glu forms.
Alternate names: bone gamma-carboxyglutamic acid-containing protein, BGLAP
ELISA kits for osteocalcin (rat) detection
The Rat Gla-Osteocalcin High Sensitive EIA Kit (Cat. # MK126) is a 96-well, sandwich-type EIA that takes advantage of a C-terminal rat osteocalcin monoclonal antibody to capture osteocalcin (OC) in rat biological samples. This antibody has minimal cross-reactivity to bovine, human, and rabbit osteocalcin. An enzyme-labeled antibody (Gla-OC4-30) specific to Gla-OC is used as the detection antibody, allowing this kit to detect Gla-osteocalcin with very high sensitivity. As such, this EIA kit is sensitive enough to pick up even minute traces of rat Gla-osteocalcin in cell supernatants supplemented with fetal calf serum.
The Rat Glu-Osteocalcin High Sensitive EIA Kit (Cat. # MK146) is a 96-well, sandwich-type EIA that uses a C-terminal rat osteocalcin monoclonal antibody to capture osteocalcin (OC). This kit's detection antibody specifically recognizes the glutamate residues present at positions 21 and 24 of the protein, making highly sensitive yet reproducible measurements of low-level Glu-OC possible. Moreover, because both the Rat Gla-Osteocalcin High Sensitive EIA Kit (Cat. # MK126) and the Rat Glu-Osteocalcin High Sensitive EIA Kit (Cat. # MK146) contain the same capture antibody, both kits may be used for Gla/Glu detection (Cat. # MK147), making simultaneous monitoring of bone formation and resorption possible.
Antibodies for osteocalcin (rat) detection
Monoclonal Anti-Rat Osteocalcin (Clone D-8G, Clone 6-7H, Clone 9-12H) antibodies selectively detect rat osteocalcin. Cat. # M185 and Cat. # M186 may be used for osteocalcin immunohistochemistry (IHC) with formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded tissues, while Cat. # M186 and Cat. # M187 may be used for Western blot (WB) analysis.
Overview
Gla-Osteocalcin (C-terminus) | MK126 | ELISA | Rat | Capture: (n/a) MoAb Detect: HRP (GlaOC4-30) MoAb |
Minimal cross‑reactivity with bovine, human, and rabbit osteocalcin |
Glu-Osteocalcin (C-terminus) | MK146 | ELISA | Rat | Capture: (n/a) MoAb Detect: HRP (n/a) MoAb Detection antibody epitope: Glu residues that straddle positions 21 and 24 of osteocalcin |
Does not cross-react with bovine, human, horse, dog, pig, sheep, goat, rabbit, or guinea pig osteocalcin |
Gla/Glu-Osteocalcin (C-terminus) |
MK147 (MK126 +MK146) | ELISA | Rat | See Clone and Source information for MK126 and MK146, above. | Minimal cross-reactivity with bovine, human, and rabbit osteocalcin |
Osteocalcin (1–25) conjugated to KLH |
M185 | IHC | Rat | (D-8G) BALB/c Mouse IgG1 MoAb |
Cross‑reacts with bovine, pig, goat, sheep, and donkey osteocalcin Does not react with human osteocalcin |
Osteocalcin (1–25) conjugated to KLH |
M186 | IHC WB |
Rat | (6–7H) BALB/c Mouse IgG1 MoAb |
Cross-reacts with bovine osteocalcin Does not react with human osteocalcin |
Osteocalcin (38–50) conjugated to KLH |
M187 | WB | Rat | (9–12H) BALB/c Mouse IgG1 MoAb |
Cross-reacts with rat osteocalcin Does not react with human and bovine osteocalcin |
More Information
Please see the product's Certificate of Analysis for information about storage conditions, product components, and technical specifications. Please see the Kit Components List to determine kit components. Certificates of Analysis and Kit Components Lists are located under the Documents tab.
Takara Bio USA, Inc.
United States/Canada: +1.800.662.2566 • Asia Pacific: +1.650.919.7300 • Europe: +33.(0)1.3904.6880 • Japan: +81.(0)77.565.6999
FOR RESEARCH USE ONLY. NOT FOR USE IN DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURES. © 2023 Takara Bio Inc. All Rights Reserved. All trademarks are the property of Takara Bio Inc. or its affiliate(s) in the U.S. and/or other countries or their respective owners. Certain trademarks may not be registered in all jurisdictions. Additional product, intellectual property, and restricted use information is available at takarabio.com.