PLS1 Antibody (monoclonal) (M04)
Mouse monoclonal antibody raised against a partial recombinant PLS1.
- SPECIFICATION
- CITATIONS
- PROTOCOLS
- BACKGROUND
Application
| WB, E |
---|---|
Primary Accession | Q14651 |
Other Accession | NM_002670 |
Reactivity | Human |
Host | mouse |
Clonality | Monoclonal |
Isotype | IgG2b Kappa |
Clone Names | 3G10 |
Calculated MW | 70253 Da |
Gene ID | 5357 |
---|---|
Other Names | Plastin-1, Intestine-specific plastin, I-plastin, PLS1 |
Target/Specificity | PLS1 (NP_002661.1, 1 a.a. ~ 102 a.a) partial recombinant protein with GST tag. MW of the GST tag alone is 26 KDa. |
Dilution | WB~~1:500~1000 |
Format | Clear, colorless solution in phosphate buffered saline, pH 7.2 . |
Storage | Store at -20°C or lower. Aliquot to avoid repeated freezing and thawing. |
Precautions | PLS1 Antibody (monoclonal) (M04) is for research use only and not for use in diagnostic or therapeutic procedures. |
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Provided below are standard protocols that you may find useful for product applications.
Background
Plastins are a family of actin-binding proteins that are conserved throughout eukaryote evolution and expressed in most tissues of higher eukaryotes. In humans, two ubiquitous plastin isoforms (L and T) have been identified. The protein encoded by this gene is a third distinct plastin isoform, which is specifically expressed at high levels in the small intestine. Alternatively spliced transcript variants varying in the 5' UTR, but encoding the same protein, have been found for this gene. A pseudogene of this gene is found on chromosome 11.
References
Diversification of transcriptional modulation: large-scale identification and characterization of putative alternative promoters of human genes. Kimura K, et al. Genome Res, 2006 Jan. PMID 16344560.Sequence comparison of human and mouse genes reveals a homologous block structure in the promoter regions. Suzuki Y, et al. Genome Res, 2004 Sep. PMID 15342556.Generation and initial analysis of more than 15,000 full-length human and mouse cDNA sequences. Strausberg RL, et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 2002 Dec 24. PMID 12477932.Organization of focal adhesion plaques is disrupted by action of the HIV-1 protease. Shoeman RL, et al. Cell Biol Int, 2002. PMID 12119179.Normalization and subtraction: two approaches to facilitate gene discovery. Bonaldo MF, et al. Genome Res, 1996 Sep. PMID 8889548.
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