For research use only
| Cat No. | ABC-SC221G |
| Product Type | Nervous Cells |
| Cell Type | Neural/Glial Cells |
| Species | Human |
| Growth Conditions | 37 ℃, 5% CO2 |
| Source Organ | Blastocyst |
| Disease | Normal |
| Storage | Liquid Nitrogen |
H9-derived neural crest cells differentiated from human embryonic stem cells, supplied for developmental biology and regenerative medicine research.
H9-derived Neural Crest Cells are differentiated from the H9 human embryonic stem cell line through controlled in vitro differentiation protocols. Neural crest cells are multipotent progenitor cells that emerge during embryonic development and give rise to a wide range of cell types, including peripheral neurons, Schwann cells, melanocytes, craniofacial cartilage, and smooth muscle cells. Following differentiation and expansion, the cells are cryopreserved for research applications. H9-derived Neural Crest Cells have been reported to express neural crest-associated markers including SOX10, p75NTR (NGFR), HNK-1, AP2α, and FOXD3. In vitro, these cells exhibit a migratory phenotype and can further differentiate into multiple neural crest-derived lineages under appropriate culture conditions. H9-derived Neural Crest Cells are widely used in developmental biology, stem cell research, disease modeling, regenerative medicine, and neurocristopathy studies. Each lot undergoes rigorous quality control testing and is confirmed to be free of mycoplasma, bacterial, fungal, and yeast contamination.
| Product Code | H9-NCCs, hESC, Neural Crest Progenitors |
| Species | Human |
| Cat.No | ABC-SC221G |
| Product Category | Primary Cells |
| Size/Quantity | 1 vial |
| Cell Type | Neural/Glial Cells |
| Growth Mode | Adherent |
| Shipping Info | Dry Ice |
| Growth Conditions | 37 ℃, 5% CO2 |
| Source Organ | Blastocyst |
| Disease | Normal |
| Biosafety Level | 1 |
| Storage | Liquid Nitrogen |
| Product Type | Nervous Cells |
| Quality Control | Each lot tests negative for mycoplasma, bacteria, yeast, and fungi. |
H9-derived Neural Crest Cells are suitable for developmental biology studies, neural crest lineage differentiation research, regenerative medicine applications, peripheral nervous system modeling, craniofacial development investigations, disease modeling, drug screening, and stem cell-based therapeutic research.