Eryclone Anti-A,B Monoclonal Antibody Reagent (Blood Grouping)
Lab Supplies

Eryclone Anti-A,B Monoclonal Antibody Reagent (Blood Grouping)

Pack Sizes Available

10ml dropper bottle
Shelf life: 2 years from date of manufacture when stored at 2-8°C

Product Description

Blood group determination is not optional when a transfusion is in play. Give a patient incompatible blood and you have initiated an acute haemolytic transfusion reaction — one of the most dangerous acute events in clinical medicine. The accuracy of the reagent used to determine blood group is not a quality metric in the abstract. It is a patient safety imperative. Eryclone Anti-A,B Monoclonal Antibody Reagent is a blood grouping reagent for the identification of A, B, and AB blood group antigens on human red blood cells, produced using monoclonal antibody technology. The reagent is produced from monoclonal antibodies with a defined, consistent specificity — unlike polyclonal antisera derived from human donors, which can show lot-to-lot variability in antibody titre and specificity. The Anti-A,B reagent detects both A and B antigens simultaneously, making it the cross-confirming reagent in the ABO typing panel. It is used in combination with Anti-A (blue) and Anti-B (yellow) reagents to provide the full ABO forward typing result. An Anti-A,B reagent that reacts positively confirms the presence of at least one of the A or B antigens — providing a particularly useful check on weak A or B subgroup expressions that might be missed by the individual anti-A or anti-B reagents alone. The reagent is formulated with inert protein additives and preservatives that maintain its potency and specificity throughout its shelf life. The dropper bottle format allows controlled, single-drop dispensing directly onto the tile or microplate well for slide, tile, or tube testing methods. For blood banks, transfusion laboratories, and hospital laboratories that perform ABO blood grouping, monoclonal blood grouping reagents are a consistently purchased item with regular replacement cycles tied to lot expiry. Indian-manufactured blood grouping reagents meeting CE or national certification standards offer competitive pricing relative to imported alternatives. Sara Wellness exports diagnostic reagents and laboratory consumables to medical distributors internationally.

Technical Specifications

  • Specificity: Anti-A,B — detects both A and B blood group antigens on human red cells
  • Antibody Type: Monoclonal — defined specificity, consistent lot-to-lot performance
  • Pack Size: 10ml dropper bottle
  • Storage: 2-8°C — do not freeze; protect from light and contamination
  • Shelf Life: 2 years from date of manufacture (stored at 2-8°C)
  • Application: ABO forward (cell) typing — tile, slide, or tube method; confirms weak A/B subgroup antigens
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

In the ABO typing panel, three antisera are used for forward (cell) typing: Anti-A, Anti-B, and Anti-A,B. The Anti-A,B reagent detects both A and B antigens on the red cell surface simultaneously. Its primary clinical value is in detecting weak ABO subgroup antigens — particularly weak A subgroups (A3, Ax, Am) and B subgroups — that may give weaker or negative reactions with the individual Anti-A or Anti-B reagents at room temperature. A positive Anti-A,B reaction with a negative or weak Anti-A or Anti-B result flags a subgroup investigation.

Polyclonal blood grouping antisera are derived from human donors or immunised animals and contain a mixture of antibodies against multiple epitopes of the target antigen. This produces lot-to-lot variability in titre and reactivity. Monoclonal reagents are produced from a single B-cell clone that secretes an antibody with a precisely defined specificity and constant, reproducible titre. Monoclonal reagents provide greater batch-to-batch consistency, reduced risk of unexpected cross-reactivity, and defined performance characteristics that are easier to validate and quality-control.

In the tile method: one drop of the Anti-A,B reagent is placed on a white tile or glass slide. One drop of the patient's 2-5% red cell suspension (prepared in saline or isotonic solution) is added alongside. The two drops are mixed with a clean applicator stick and the tile is tilted back and forth for 2 minutes at room temperature while observing for agglutination. A clear agglutination (clumping of red cells visible against the white background) is a positive result, indicating A or B (or both) antigens are present.

In a standard ABO forward typing, group O patients' red cells show: no reaction with Anti-A (negative), no reaction with Anti-B (negative), and no reaction with Anti-A,B (negative). In reverse typing (patient serum vs. A and B indicator cells), group O patients' serum agglutinates both A1 cells and B cells, confirming the presence of both anti-A and anti-B antibodies in the serum. Concordance between forward and reverse typing results is required for a valid ABO blood group determination.

The Eryclone Anti-A,B reagent should be stored at 2-8°C in a standard laboratory refrigerator. It should not be frozen, as freezing can denature the antibody protein and destroy reagent activity. The dropper bottle should be tightly capped after each use to prevent evaporation and contamination. The reagent should be warmed to room temperature before use, as cold reagents can give artificially reduced reaction strengths. Check the expiry date before each use session, and discard reagent showing any turbidity or colour change.

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