RHOB Polyclonal antibody proteintech 14326-1-AP
$449.00
In stock
SKU
14326-1-AP
| Host / Isotype: Rabbit / IgG | Class: Polyclonal |
| Reactivity: Human, Mouse, Rat And More (1) | Immunogen: CatNo: Ag5593 Product name: Recombinant human RHOB protein Source: e coli.-derived, PGEX-4T Tag: GST Domain: 1-196 aa of BC066954 Sequence: MAAIRKKLVVVGDGACGKTCLLIVFSKDEFPEVYVPTVFENYVADIEVDGKQVELALWDTAGQEDYDRLRPLSYPDTDVILMCFSVDSPDSLENIPEKWVPEVKHFCPNVPIILVANKKDLRSDEHVRTELARMKQEPVRTDDGRAMAVRIQAYDYLECSAKTKEGVREVFETATRAALQKRYGSQNGCINCCKVL Predict reactive species |
| Applications: WB, IHC, IF/ICC, IP, ELISA | Observed Molecular Weight: 22 kDa |
| Formulation: PBS, Azide, Glycerol | GenBank Accession Number: BC066954 |
| Conjugate: Unconjugated | Gene Symbol: RHOB |
| Tested Applications: Positive WB detected in | Gene ID (NCBI): 388 |
| Application: Western Blot (WB) | RRID: AB_2179092 |
| Dilution: WB : 1:2000-1:12000 | Conjugate: Unconjugated |
| Tested Reactivity: Human, Mouse, Rat | Form: Liquid |
| Host / Isotype: Rabbit / IgG | Background Information: Rho-related GTP-binding protein RhoB (RHOB) is also named ARH6, ARHB and Rho cDNA clone 6 (h6). RhoB was the first member of the Rho family to be implicated in endosomal trafficking. One study showed that RhoB localizes and activates its downstream target, serine/threonine kinase (PRK1), on endosomes, and acts through this signaling pathway to disrupt the trafficking of internalized EGF receptor from endosomes to a prelysosomal compartment (PMID: 29385717). RhoB is known to be part of the immediate early genetic response to epidermal growth factor, transforming growth factor β, Src activation, or genotoxic stress (PMID:9545335, PMID: 10679283). RhoB was shown to have potential implications for EGF signaling by targeting the activated EGF receptors to the lysosome, which represents an "off-switch" for mitogenic signals (PMID: 1050858). RhoB was also demonstrated to exert a negative regulatory influence on TGF-β-induced transcriptional activation (PMID:9545335). The activity of the RhoB promoter was stimulated by genotoxic treatments indicating its role in the cellular response to DNA damage (PMID:9388198). |