Human ENSA protein (Recombinant) (His-Tag) (STJP016599)

SKU:
STJP016599
£125.50 - £649.50
Processing The item has been added

Host: E.coli
Applications: SDS-PAGE
Note: STRICTLY FOR FURTHER SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH USE ONLY (RUO). MUST NOT TO BE USED IN DIAGNOSTIC OR THERAPEUTIC APPLICATIONS.
Short Description : Recombinant-Human ENSA-His-Tag protein was developed from e.coli and has a target region of His-Tag. For use in research applications.
Formulation: Liquid in 20mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 8.0) containing 10% Glycerol, 0.2mM PMSF
Concentration: 1 mg/mL
Storage Instruction: For short term storage, keep at +2C to +8C for up to 1 week. For long term storage, aliquot and store at-20C, and avoid repeat freeze-thaw cycles.
Gene Symbol: ENSA
Gene ID: 2029
Uniprot ID: ENSA_HUMAN
Immunogen Region: 1-121aa
Accession Number: NP_004427
Immunogen: Human
Immunogen Sequence: MGSSHHHHHH SSGLVPRGSH MSQKQEEENP AEETGEEKQD TQEKEGILPE RAEEAKLKAK YPSLGQKPGG SDFLMKRLQK GQKYFDSGDY NMAKAKMKNK QLPSAGPDKN LVTGDHIPTP QDLPQRKSSL VTSKLAGGQV E
Tissue Specificity Widely expressed with high levels in skeletal muscle and brain and lower levels in the pancreas.
Post Translational Modifications Phosphorylation at Ser-67 by GWL during mitosis is essential for interaction with PPP2R2D (PR55-delta) and subsequent inactivation of PP2A. Phosphorylated by PKA.
Function Protein phosphatase inhibitor that specifically inhibits protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) during mitosis. When phosphorylated at Ser-67 during mitosis, specifically interacts with PPP2R2D (PR55-delta) and inhibits its activity, leading to inactivation of PP2A, an essential condition to keep cyclin-B1-CDK1 activity high during M phase. Also acts as a stimulator of insulin secretion by interacting with sulfonylurea receptor (ABCC8), thereby preventing sulfonylurea from binding to its receptor and reducing K(ATP) channel currents.
Protein Name Alpha-Endosulfine
Arpp-19e
Database Links Reactome: R-HSA-2465910
Cellular Localisation Cytoplasm
Alternative Protein Names Alpha-Endosulfine protein
Arpp-19e protein
ENSA protein

Information sourced from Uniprot.org