Assays

What is an Assay?
5 Assays visible to you, out of a total of 5

This assay captures metadata associated with tissue collection procedures, documenting critical provenance and contextual information for biological specimens obtained from study subjects. It records standardized parameters such as tissue type, anatomical source, collection method, preservation conditions, and relevant donor or sample identifiers to ensure traceability and reproducibility across downstream experimental workflows. This metadata serves as a foundational record linking collected ...

A titer assay designed to quantify the concentration or activity level of a specific biological agent (such as a virus, antibody, or other biomolecule) in a given sample, with results linked to associated experimental datasets for integrated analysis. The assay employs serial dilution methodology to determine the highest dilution at which a detectable response or activity is observed, providing a standardized endpoint titer value. Results are systematically recorded and cross-referenced with ...

This assay evaluates the binding affinity and interaction of test compounds or biological molecules (such as antibodies or Fc-fusion proteins) to Fc receptors (FcRs), which are critical mediators of immune effector functions including antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) and phagocytosis. Binding interactions are quantified using established biochemical or biophysical detection methodologies, enabling characterization of Fc-FcR engagement relevant to the functional activity of ...

Antibody-dependent neutrophil phagocytosis evaluates antibody-mediated uptake of targets by neutrophils. It measures fluorescence or imaging-based signals to assess innate immune activity. Input: Antibody-labeled target cells and neutrophils Output: Phagocytosis data file indicating neutrophil uptake efficiency.

Antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis measures immune cell uptake of antibody-coated targets. The assay quantifies phagocytic activity as an indicator of antibody function and cellular response. Input: Antibody-treated target cells and effector cells Output: Phagocytosis data file (e.g., fluorescence or imaging-based readouts).

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