For research use only
| Cat No. | ABC-X0406C |
| Product Type | Overexpression Stable Cell Lines |
| Cell Type | Epithelial |
| Species | Dog |
| Host Cell | 293T |
| Source Organ | Kidney |
| Disease | Normal |
| Storage | Liquid Nitrogen |
293T cell line overexpressing canine GPRC5D, suitable for comparative immunology, CAR-T validation, and antibody discovery targeting GPRC5D.
Dog GPRC5D 293T Overexpression Cell Line is a genetically engineered model derived from selected human embryonic kidney (293T) parental cell line based on customers’ requirement. Dog GPRC5D 293T overexpression cell line is generated by stable integration of exogenous dog GPRC5D into 293T host cells using our optimized transduction of lentiviral vectors. Overexpression clone is validated at gene level by qRT-PCR.
Target
GPRC5D is an orphan G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) involved in signal transduction pathways and has gained attention as a novel surface marker and therapeutic target, particularly in multiple myeloma. Its species-specific expression profile supports cross-species validation studies.
AcceGen offers generation of stable overexpression cell lines targeting any gene of your interest. Polyclonal or monoclonal is optional based on customers’ research needs.
| Species | Dog |
| Cat.No | ABC-X0406C |
| Product Category | Transfected Stable Cell Lines |
| Size/Quantity | 1 vial |
| Cell Type | Epithelial |
| Growth Mode | Adherent |
| Shipping Info | Dry Ice |
| Growth Conditions | 37 °C, 5% CO2 |
| Source Organ | Kidney |
| Disease | Normal |
| Biosafety Level | 1 |
| Storage | Liquid Nitrogen |
| Product Type | Overexpression Stable Cell Lines |
| Host Cell | 293T |
| Quality Control | All cells test negative for mycoplasma, bacteria, yeast, and fungi. |
This cell line offers a powerful tool for evaluating cross-reactivity and binding specificity of dog-targeted antibodies or therapeutics. It facilitates G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) signaling research, antibody discovery, and translational immunotherapy development in canine models of disease.