FXIIIA Blocking Peptide peptide (STJ504090)
SPECIFICATIONS
ImmunogenSynthetic peptide taken within amino acid region 700-750 on human factor XIII A subunit protein.
General Information
| Short Description | FXIIIA Blocking Peptide is synthetically produced from the 700-750 sequence and is suitable for use in western blot applications. |
| Applications | Immunodepletion/Immunocompetition |
| Note | STRICTLY FOR FURTHER SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH USE ONLY (RUO). MUST NOT TO BE USED IN DIAGNOSTIC OR THERAPEUTIC APPLICATIONS. |
Product Properties
| Formulation | Liquid form at 2.5mg/ml concentration in PBS. Up to 5% DMSO can be added. Orders with >1mg can be supplied in lyophilized powder form, or in buffer of choice. |
| Storage Instruction | Store at-20ยฐC for long term storage. Avoid freeze-thaw cycles. |
Target Information
| Gene Symbol | F13A1 |
| Gene ID | 2162 |
| Uniprot ID | F13A_HUMAN |
| Immunogen | Synthetic peptide taken within amino acid region 700-750 on human factor XIII A subunit protein. |
| Immunogen Region | 700-750 |
Additional Info
| Post Translational Modifications | The activation peptide is released by thrombin. |
| Function | Factor XIII is activated by thrombin and calcium ion to a transglutaminase that catalyzes the formation of gamma-glutamyl-epsilon-lysine cross-links between fibrin chains, thus stabilizing the fibrin clot. Also cross-link alpha-2-plasmin inhibitor, or fibronectin, to the alpha chains of fibrin. |
| Peptide Name | Coagulation Factor Xiii A ChainCoagulation Factor XiiiaProtein-Glutamine Gamma-Glutamyltransferase A ChainTransglutaminase A Chain |
| Database Links | Reactome: R-HSA-114608Reactome: R-HSA-140875Reactome: R-HSA-6785807 |
| Cellular Localisation | CytoplasmSecretedSecreted Into The Blood PlasmaCytoplasmic In Most TissuesBut Also Secreted In The Blood Plasma |
| Alternative Peptide Names | Coagulation Factor Xiii A Chain proteinCoagulation Factor Xiiia proteinProtein-Glutamine Gamma-Glutamyltransferase A Chain proteinTransglutaminase A Chain proteinF13A1 proteinF13A protein |
Information sourced from Uniprot.org