223

ATG9B Antibody | 5797

(No reviews yet) Write a Review
SKU:
223-5797-GEN
NULL341.00 - NULL647.00

Description

ATG9B Antibody | 5797 | Gentaur UK, US & Europe Distribution

Host: Rabbit

Reactivity: Human, Mouse, Rat

Homology: N/A

Immunogen: ATG9B antibody was raised against a 17 amino acid synthetic peptide near the carboxy terminus of human ATG9B.
The immunogen is located within amino acids 850 - 900 of ATG9B.

Research Area: Autophagy

Tested Application: E, WB, ICC, IF

Application: ATG9B antibody can be used for detection of ATG9B by Western blot at 1 - 2 μg/mL. Antibody can also be used for immunocytochemistry starting at 10 μg/mL. For immunofluorescence start at 20 μg/mL.
Antibody validated: Western Blot in human samples; Immunocytochemistry in human samples and Immunofluorescence in human samples. All other applications and species not yet tested.

Specificiy: N/A

Positive Control 1: Cat. No. 1201 - HeLa Cell Lysate

Positive Control 2: Cat. No. 17-001 - HeLa Cell Slide

Positive Control 3: N/A

Positive Control 4: N/A

Positive Control 5: N/A

Positive Control 6: N/A

Molecular Weight: N/A

Validation: N/A

Isoform: N/A

Purification: ATG9B Antibody is affinity chromatography purified via peptide column.

Clonality: Polyclonal

Clone: N/A

Isotype: IgG

Conjugate: Unconjugated

Physical State: Liquid

Buffer: ATG9B Antibody is supplied in PBS containing 0.02% sodium azide.

Concentration: 1 mg/mL

Storage Condition: ATG9B antibody can be stored at 4˚C for three months and -20˚C, stable for up to one year. As with all antibodies care should be taken to avoid repeated freeze thaw cycles. Antibodies should not be exposed to prolonged high temperatures.

Alternate Name: ATG9B Antibody: SONE, APG9L2, NOS3AS, Autophagy-related protein 9B, APG9-like 2, Protein sONE

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

BACKGROUND: ATG9B Antibody: Autophagy, the process of bulk degradation of cellular proteins through an autophagosomic-lysosomal pathway is important for normal growth control and may be defective in tumor cells. It is involved in the preservation of cellular nutrients under starvation conditions as well as the normal turnover of cytosolic components. This process is negatively regulated by TOR (Target of rapamycin) through phosphorylation of autophagy protein APG1. ATG9B plays a role in autophagy and it's highly expressed in placenta and pituitary gland.

View AllClose