WARNING: Reagents contain sodium azide. Sodium azide is very toxic if ingested or inhaled. Avoid contact with skin, eyes, or clothing. Wear eye or face protection when handling. If skin or eye contact occurs, wash with copious amounts of water. If ingested or inhaled, contact a physician immediately. Sodium azide yields toxic hydrazoic acid under acidic conditions. Dilute azide-containing compounds in running water before discarding to avoid accumulation of potentially explosive deposits in lead or copper plumbing.
Handhabung
Avoid freezing and thawing repeatly.
Lagerung
4 °C/-20 °C
Informationen zur Lagerung
Store at 4 °C for short term use.Store at -20 °C for long term preservation.
Target
C1QTNF2
(C1q and Tumor Necrosis Factor Related Protein 2 (C1QTNF2))
C1QTNF2 antikoerper, fe50b04 antikoerper, wu:fe50b04 antikoerper, CTRP2 antikoerper, zacrp2 antikoerper, 1810033K05Rik antikoerper, Ctrp2 antikoerper, RGD1561041 antikoerper, C1q and tumor necrosis factor related protein 2 antikoerper, C1q and TNF related 2 antikoerper, C1QTNF2 antikoerper, c1qtnf2 antikoerper, C1qtnf2 antikoerper
Hintergrund
Adipose tissue of an organism plays a major role in regulating physiologic and pathologic processes such as metabolism and immunity by producing and secreting a variety of bioactive molecules termed adipokines.One highly conserved family of adipokines is adiponectin/ACRP30 and its structural and functional paralogs, the C1q/tumor necrosis factor-alpha-related proteins (CTRPs) 1-7.Unlike adiponectin, which is expressed exclusively by differentiated adipocytes, the CTRPs are expressed in a wide variety of tissues.These proteins are thought to act mainly on liver and muscle tissue to control glucose and lipid metabolism.An analysis of the crystal structure of adiponectin revealed a structural and evolutionary link between TNF and C1q-containing proteins, suggesting that these proteins arose from a common ancestral innate immunity gene.Of the CTRPs, CTRP2 is most similar structurally and functionally to adiponectin.Recombinant CTRP2 rapidly activated AMPK and MAPK in cultured C2C12 cells, leading to increased glycogen accumulation and fatty acid oxidation.