Anti A Monoclonal Blood Grouping Reagent (IgM)
Lab Supplies

Anti A Monoclonal Blood Grouping Reagent (IgM)

Pack Sizes Available

1 x 5ml dropper bottle

Product Description

Blood typing is one of the oldest and most consequential diagnostic procedures in clinical medicine. Get it right and a transfusion saves a life. Get it wrong and the consequences are irreversible. The Anti-A Monoclonal Blood Grouping Reagent is the first of the three essential reagents that every blood bank, transfusion centre, and pre-operative blood screening laboratory keeps permanently in stock — alongside Anti-B and Anti-D — because without these three, nothing in blood banking moves. The Anti-A Monoclonal Reagent is a murine monoclonal IgM antibody produced in vitro from a selected hybridoma cell line derived by fusion of mouse antibody-producing B-lymphocytes with mouse myeloma cells. Because it originates from a single cell line, every molecule of antibody in the bottle is structurally identical with the same specificity, the same avidity, and the same agglutination characteristics. That batch-to-batch consistency is precisely what makes monoclonal reagents the global replacement for polyclonal antisera: there is no variation from one production lot to the next and no dependence on human donor serum. When a drop of this reagent is mixed with a drop of the patient's washed red cell suspension on a slide or in a tube, it will agglutinate red cells carrying the A antigen. Strong, visible clumping within 15 to 30 seconds on a slide is a positive result. No agglutination is negative. The technique is simple enough for a junior blood bank technician to perform correctly, which is exactly why it has remained the standard forward grouping method in settings ranging from fully equipped reference laboratories to district hospital blood banks. The reagent is internationally colour-coded blue — per the global convention that makes Anti-A bottles universally distinguishable from Anti-B (yellow) and Anti-D regardless of language or label design. It is supplied in a calibrated dropper bottle for consistent drop-to-drop volume in slide and tube tests. Titre is at minimum 1:256 for Anti-A as per international quality standards. Shelf life is 24 to 36 months from manufacture when stored at 2 to 8°C. The 10ml bottle is the standard institutional format; 5ml, 6x10ml box, and 1L bulk sizes are available for different throughput requirements. For laboratory reagent importers and blood bank supply distributors — blood grouping reagents have non-negotiable reorder cycles. Every blood bank runs these reagents every day. Stock-outs are not acceptable. The supply chain for Anti-A must be predictable, consistent, and well-documented. Sara Wellness exports monoclonal blood grouping reagents and other IVD products to wholesale buyers across Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia. We understand cold-chain requirements, CDSCO documentation, and batch-level certificate requirements for import clearance. Fifteen years of IVD reagent export experience means the process runs predictably. Contact us with your volume requirement and we will respond promptly.

Technical Specifications

  • Antibody Class and Source: Murine monoclonal IgM; produced in vitro from selected hybridoma cell line (mouse B-lymphocyte + mouse myeloma cell fusion); single cell line origin — identical specificity, avidity, and structure across all production lots
  • Specificity and Colour Coding: Specific for A antigen on human red blood cells (ABO blood group system); internationally colour-coded BLUE per global blood grouping reagent convention; calibrated dropper bottle for consistent drop volume
  • Titre and Performance: Minimum titre: 1:256 (tube agglutination test against A1 red cells); strong direct agglutination on slide within 15-30 seconds with A antigen-positive red cells; suitable for slide, tube, and microplate techniques
  • Storage and Shelf Life: Store at 2-8°C; do not freeze; protect from light; shelf life 24-36 months from manufacture; return to refrigerator promptly after use; confirm daily reactivity with known A-positive and O (negative) red cell controls
  • Regulatory Status: ISO 13845:2016 CE-IVD marked; CDSCO registered IVD diagnostic reagent (India); for in vitro diagnostic use only; handle all blood-contact materials as potentially infectious; contains sodium azide as preservative
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Anti-A Monoclonal Blood Grouping Reagent is an in vitro diagnostic (IVD) reagent used for the detection and identification of the A antigen on human red blood cells by direct agglutination. It is used in ABO blood grouping (forward grouping) of patients and donors in blood banks, transfusion centres, and hospital pre-operative blood screening laboratories. Identifying the A antigen is essential for determining whether a patient's blood group is A, AB, or O, which governs compatibility decisions for blood transfusion, organ transplantation, and maternal-foetal medicine.

The Anti-A Monoclonal Reagent contains murine monoclonal IgM antibodies produced in vitro from a single hybridoma cell line — obtained by fusing mouse antibody-producing B-lymphocytes with mouse myeloma cells. Because the antibody originates from a single cell line, every molecule has identical structure, specificity, and avidity. This produces batch-to-batch consistency that polyclonal antisera — derived from multiple human donors with variable immune responses — cannot match. Monoclonal reagents are the global standard for blood grouping precisely because their performance characteristics are predictable and reproducible across every production lot.

Anti-A blood grouping reagents are internationally colour-coded BLUE. This colour coding follows global conventions established to prevent misidentification of blood grouping reagents regardless of language or label design: Anti-A is always blue, Anti-B is always yellow, and Anti-AB is typically not colour-coded or uses a different convention depending on the manufacturer. The colour coding is applied to the dropper bottle cap and/or label so that laboratory staff can identify the correct reagent at a glance — a critical safety feature in a blood bank where speed and accuracy must coexist.

The Anti-A Monoclonal Blood Grouping Reagent must achieve a minimum titre of 1:256 as per international blood grouping reagent quality standards. Titre refers to the highest dilution of the reagent that still causes visible agglutination of A antigen-positive red cells in the tube agglutination test. A titre of 1:256 means the reagent can be diluted 256-fold and still detect the A antigen, indicating high sensitivity and potency. This ensures the reagent will produce strong, unambiguous agglutination reactions in routine blood grouping tests, minimising the risk of weak or missed reactions.

Anti-A Monoclonal Blood Grouping Reagent is validated for use with the slide technique (a drop of reagent plus a drop of red cell suspension on a glass slide, mixed with a stick and read within 2 minutes), the tube technique (reagent and cell suspension in a test tube, centrifuged and read for agglutination), and the microplate technique (miniaturised tube method in microplate wells for high-throughput batch testing). The reagent is optimised for direct use without dilution in any of these three techniques. The slide technique is the most common in routine blood bank settings due to speed and simplicity.

Anti-A Monoclonal Blood Grouping Reagent must be stored at 2 to 8°C throughout its shelf life of 24 to 36 months from the date of manufacture. The reagent must not be frozen. It should be protected from direct sunlight and returned to the refrigerator promptly after each use. The calibrated dropper bottle should not be contaminated — the dropper tip must not touch red cell suspensions, other reagents, or any surfaces during use. Contaminated or discoloured reagents must not be used. On each day of use, the reagent reactivity should be confirmed by testing with known positive (group A) and negative (group O) red cell controls.

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