Work with LifeSpan to design a custom immunohistochemistry to address your specific biological question. Outsource the entire localization process without having to
worry about finding and characterizing target specific antibodies, sourcing and validating difficult-to-find tissues, and having the ability to interpret the resulting
immunostaining in relation to complex human pathologies.
TCR Screening Services
Test your therapeutic antibodies in immunohistochemistry against a broad panel of normal frozen human tissue types in order to determine potential unintended binding.
Our non-GLP TCR services are designed on the FDA recommendation outlined in their "Points to Consider in the Manufacture and Testing of Monoclonal Antibody Products for Human Use".
Customer.Support@LSBio.com - To submit questions about existing orders, pricing, availability,
bulk quotes, proforma invoice requests, or other billing issues.
Technical.Support@LSBio.com - To request technical information requests about an LSBio product
or its application.
Sales@LSBio.com - To request information about fee-for-service contract IHC studies, IHC reports, distribution
agreements, or general business development.
Registration enables users to use special features of this website, such as past
order histories, retained contact details for faster checkout, review submissions, and special promotions.
Registration enables users to use special features of this website, such as past
order histories, retained contact details for faster checkout, review submissions, and special promotions.
Wish List
View Cart
Human NR5A2 / LRH-1 Protein (Recombinant His + T7) (aa300-541) - LS-G25399
Alpha1-fetoprotein transcription factor (Ftf), a NR5 fushi tarazu-like receptor, also is known as 'human B1-binding factor' (HB1F), 'CYP7A promoter-binding factor' (CPF), and 'liver receptor homolog 1' (LRH1). Ftf has been shown to affect the transcription of hepatic genes including alpha fetoprotein encoding gene (AFP), viral hepatitis B enhancer II, and 7-alpha-hydroxylase encoding gene (CYP7A1). Ftf has also been shown to affect hepatic cholesterol metabolism and bile acid synthesis.