223

Alpha-tubulin Antibody (biotin) | 7597-biotin

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SKU:
223-7597-biotin-GEN
£1,294.00

Description

Alpha-tubulin Antibody (biotin) | 7597-biotin | Gentaur UK, US & Europe Distribution

Host: Rabbit

Reactivity: Human, Mouse, Rat, Rabbit, Chicken, Zebrafish

Homology: N/A

Immunogen: Biotin-Alpha-tubulin antibody was raised against an 18 amino acid peptide near the carboxy terminus of human alpha-tubulin

Research Area: Homeostasis

Tested Application: E, WB

Application: Biotin-Alpha-tubulin antibody can be used for detection of alpha-tubulin by Western blot at 1 - 2 μg/ml.
Antibody validated: Western Blot in human, mouse, and rat samples. All other applications and species not yet tested.

Specificiy: Biotin-Alpha-tubulin antibody is human, mouse, rat, rabbit, chicken, and zebrafish reactive.

Positive Control 1: Cat. No. 1303 - Human Brain Tissue Lysate

Positive Control 2: N/A

Positive Control 3: N/A

Positive Control 4: N/A

Positive Control 5: N/A

Positive Control 6: N/A

Molecular Weight: Predicted: 50 kDa
Observed: 55 kDa

Validation: N/A

Isoform: N/A

Purification: Biotin-Alpha-tubulin antibody is affinity chromatography purified via peptide column.

Clonality: Polyclonal

Clone: N/A

Isotype: IgG

Conjugate: Biotin

Physical State: Liquid

Buffer: Biotin-Alpha-tubulin antibody is supplied in PBS containing 1% BSA and 0.02% sodium azide.

Concentration: 1 mg/mL

Storage Condition: Biotin-Alpha-tubulin antibody can be stored at 4˚C for three months and -20˚C, stable for up to one year.

Alternate Name: Tubulin alpha-1A, TUBA1A, TUBA3, LIS3

User Note: Optimal dilutions for each application to be determined by the researcher.

BACKGROUND: Alpha-tubulin belongs to the tubulin superfamily, which is composed of six distinct families. Along with beta-tubulins, alpha-tubulins are the major components of microtubules. These microtubules are involved in a wide variety of cellular activities ranging from mitosis and transport events to cell movement and the maintenance of cell shape. Alpha- and beta-tubulin dimers are assembled to 13 protofilaments that form a microtubule of 22-nm diameter (reviewed in 1) . Tyrosine ligase adds a C-terminal tyrosine to monomeric alpha-tubulin. Assembled microtubules can again be detyrosinated by a cytoskeleton-associated carboxypeptidase (2) . Another post-translational modification of detyrosinated alpha-tubulin is C-terminal polyglutamylation, which is characteristic of microtubules in neuronal cells and the mitotic spindle (3) . Like GAPDH and -Actin, this antibody makes an excellent loading control in immunoblots.

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Additional Information

Size:
0.1 mg
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