710
Anti- IKBKB Antibody | FNab04201
- SKU:
- 710-FNab04201-GEN
- Availability:
- In Stock - Delivery within a week
Description
Anti- IKBKB Antibody | FNab04201 | Gentaur UK, US & Europe Distribution
Form: liquid
Purification: Immunogen affinity purified
Purity: ≥95% as determined by SDS-PAGE
Host: Rabbit
Clonality: polyclonal
Clone ID: N/A
Isotype: IgG
Storage: PBS with 0.02% sodium azide and 50% glycerol pH 7.3, -20℃ for 12 months (Avoid repeated freeze / thaw cycles.)
Background: Serine kinase that plays an essential role in the NF-kappa-B signaling pathway which is activated by multiple stimuli such as inflammatory cytokines, bacterial or viral products, DNA damages or other cellular stresses. Acts as part of the canonical IKK complex in the conventional pathway of NF-kappa-B activation and phosphorylates inhibitors of NF-kappa-B on 2 critical serine residues. These modifications allow polyubiquitination of the inhibitors and subsequent degradation by the proteasome. In turn, free NF-kappa-B is translocated into the nucleus and activates the transcription of hundreds of genes involved in immune response, growth control, or protection against apoptosis. In addition to the NF-kappa-B inhibitors, phosphorylates several other components of the signaling pathway including NEMO/IKBKG, NF-kappa-B subunits RELA and NFKB1, as well as IKK-related kinases TBK1 and IKBKE. IKK-related kinase phosphorylations may prevent the overproduction of inflammatory mediators since they exert a negative regulation on canonical IKKs. Phosphorylates FOXO3, mediating the TNF-dependent inactivation of this pro-apoptotic transcription factor. Also phosphorylates other substrates including NCOA3, BCL10 and IRS1. Within the nucleus, acts as an adapter protein for NFKBIA degradation in UV-induced NF-kappa-B activation.
Immunogen: inhibitor of kappa light polypeptide gene enhancer in B-cells, kinase beta
synonyms: IKKB
Molecular weight (observed) : 87kd
Reactivity Species: Human, Mouse
Tested Application: ELISA, WB, IHC, IF
Recomended Dillution : WB: 1:500-1:2000; IHC: 1:20-1:200
Research Area: Immunology, Cardiovascular, Metabolism, Signal Transduction