ELISA, Western Blotting (WB), Flow Cytometry (FACS)
Verwendungszweck
Anti-PGLYRP2 Antibody Picoband®
Produktmerkmale
Anti-PGLYRP2 Antibody Picoband® (ABIN7600457). Tested in WB, Flow Cytometry, ELISA applications. This antibody reacts with Human, Mouse, Rat. The brand Picoband indicates this is a premium antibody that guarantees superior quality, high affinity, and strong signals with minimal background in Western blot applications. Only our best-performing antibodies are designated as Picoband, ensuring unmatched performance.
Aufreinigung
Immunogen affinity purified.
Immunogen
E.coli-derived human PGLYRP2 recombinant protein (Position: D198-Q524). Human PGLYRP2 shares 79.2% amino acid (aa) sequence identity with mouse PGLYRP2.
Western blot, 0.1-0.25 μg/mL, Human, Mouse, Rat Flow Cytometry (Fixed), 1-3 μg/1x106 cells, Human ELISA, 0.1-0.5 μg/mL, - 1. Liu, C., Xu, Z., Gupta, D., Dziarski, R. Peptidoglycan recognition proteins: a novel family of four human innate immunity pattern recognition molecules. J. Biol. Chem. 276: 34686-34694, 2001. 2. Xu, M., Wang, Z., Locksley, R. M. Innate immune responses in peptidoglycan recognition protein L-deficient mice. Molec. Cell. Biol. 24: 7949-7957, 2004.
Beschränkungen
Nur für Forschungszwecke einsetzbar
Format
Lyophilized
Rekonstitution
Adding 0.2 mL of distilled water will yield a concentration of 500 μg/mL.
At -20°C for one year from date of receipt. After reconstitution, at 4°C for one month. It can also be aliquotted and stored frozen at -20°C for six months. Avoid repeated freezing and thawing.
Target
PGLYRP2
(Peptidoglycan Recognition Protein 2 (PGLYRP2))
Peptidoglycan recognition protein 2 (PGLYRP2) is an enzyme (EC 3.5.1.28), N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase (NAMLAA), that hydrolyzes bacterial cell wall peptidoglycan and is encoded by the PGLYRP2 gene. This gene encodes a peptidoglycan recognition protein, which belongs to the N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase 2 family. This protein hydrolyzes the link between N-acetylmuramoyl residues and L-amino acid residues in bacterial cell wall glycopeptides, and thus may play a scavenger role by digesting biologically active peptidoglycan into biologically inactive fragments.