Alpha E-Catenin Monoclonal antibody proteintech 66221-1-Ig
$449.00
In stock
SKU
66221-1-Ig
CTNNA1, 2B7B8, alpha catenin, Alpha E catenin, CAP102
| Host / Isotype: Mouse / IgG1 | Class: Monoclonal |
| Reactivity: human, mouse | Immunogen: CatNo: Ag23603 Product name: Recombinant human CTNNA1 protein Source: e coli.-derived, PET30a Tag: 6*His Domain: 188-536 aa of BC031262 Sequence: SEMDNYEPGVYTEKVLEATKLLSNTVMPRFTEQVEAAVEALSSDPAQPMDENEFIDASRLVYDGIRDIRKAVLMIRTPEELDDSDFETEDFDVRSRTSVQTEDDQLIAGQSARAIMAQLPQEQKAKIAEQVASFQEEKSKLDAEVSKWDDSGNDIIVLAKQMCMIMMEMTDFTRGKGPLKNTSDVISAAKKIAEAGSRMDKLGRTIADHCPDSACKQDLLAYLQRIALYCHQLNICSKVKAEVQNLGGELVVSGVDSAMSLIQAAKNLMNAVVQTVKASYVASTKYQKSQGMASLNLPAVSWKMKAPEKKPLVKREKQDETQTKIKRASQKKHVNPVQALSEFKAMDSI Predict reactive species |
| Applications: WB, IHC, FC (Intra), ELISA | Observed Molecular Weight: 906 aa, 100 kDa |
| Formulation: PBS, Azide, Glycerol | GenBank Accession Number: BC031262 |
| Conjugate: Unconjugated | Gene Symbol: Alpha E-Catenin |
| Tested Applications: Positive WB detected in | Gene ID (NCBI): 1495 |
| Application: Western Blot (WB) | RRID: AB_2881612 |
| Dilution: WB : 1:500-1:2000 | Conjugate: Unconjugated |
| Tested Reactivity: Human, Mouse | Form: Liquid |
| Host / Isotype: Mouse / IgG1 | Background Information: Alpha catenin is an essential component of adherens junctions that connects E-cadherin-β-catenin complexes with the actin cytoskeleton. It also recruits a range of other important proteins to developing intercellular junctions. Three alpha catenins exist in human: alpha-E-catenin, alpha-N-catenin, and alpha-T-catenin, which share substantial amino-acid sequence similarity but have distinct tissue distribution. alpha-E-catenin is ubiquitously expressed, alpha-N-catenin is restricted to neuronal tissue, and alpha-T-catenin is primarily expressed in heart tissue. Reduced levels of alpha-E-catenin protein seem to be characteristic of many different human cancers, including malignant tumours of the breast, colon, stomach, oesophagus, bladder and liver. In addition, the loss of alpha-E-catenin often correlates with the degree of tumour differentiation and metastasis. |