Rubeola
Measles is caused by the rubeola virus, a 100–200 nm in diameter single-stranded, negative-sense, enveloped RNA virus, of the genus Morbillivirus within the family Paramyxoviridae. The virus was first isolated in 1954 by Nobel Laureate John F. Enders and Thomas Peebles, who were careful to point out that the isolations were made from patients who had Koplik's spots. Humans are the natural hosts of the virus; no other animal reservoirs are known to exist, though it is closely related to the rinderpest and canine distemper viruses.
Subcategories
Rubeola Open Reading Frames
An open reading frame or ORF is a portion of an organism's genome which contains a sequence of bases that could potentially encode a protein. In a gene, ORFs are located between the start-code sequence (initiation codon) and the stop-code sequence (termination codon).
Rubeola Assays and Components
Ready to use assays as well as components for your kits. Immunofluorescence, ELISA, western, PCR and more.
Don't see what you need? Let us know here.
Rubeola Antibodies
Monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies to proteins of the virus as well as non-structural regulatory and assembly proteins. All have been evaluated for IFA and western blot function.
Rubeola Antigens
Infected cell extracts, nuclear extracts, density gradient purified virus, glycoprotein fractions and more. Many are characterized with a full SDS-PAGE and western blot profile.