Pin1 Positive Control for STJ502500 peptide (STJ504724)

SPECIFICATIONS
STJ504724-5
🚚 Free UK Delivery on orders over £150
Processing The item has been added
Enquire For Bulk Order
✓ 1-Year Performance Guarantee | SDS & Datasheet Included | Expert Tech Support | Covered by St John's Laboratory Guarantee

General Information

Short DescriptionPin1 Positive Control for STJ502500 is synthetically produced from the sequence and is suitable for use in western blot applications.
ApplicationsWB
NoteSTRICTLY FOR FURTHER SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH USE ONLY (RUO). MUST NOT TO BE USED IN DIAGNOSTIC OR THERAPEUTIC APPLICATIONS.

Product Properties

Dilution RangeWB: 1:500
FormulationProvided as 100 uL ready-to-use, in SDS-PAGE sample buffer (Laemelli's buffer) containing Tris, pH 6.8, 1 % SDS, Glycerol and Bromophenolblue blue as tracking dye. The sample is reduced by adding 2% beta mercaptoethanol. The protein concentration is
Storage InstructionStore at-20°C for long term storage. Avoid freeze-thaw cycles.

Target Information

SpecificityThis is positive control is recommended for use in combination with Pin1 antibody STJ502500.

Additional Info

Background Peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerase (PPIase) that binds to and isomerizes specific phosphorylated Ser/Thr-Pro (pSer/Thr-Pro) motifs in a subset of proteins, resulting in conformational changes in the proteins (PubMed:21497122, PubMed:22033920). Displays a preference for an acidic residue N-terminal to the isomerized proline bond. Regulates mitosis presumably by interacting with NIMA and attenuating its mitosis-promoting activity. Down-regulates kinase activity of BTK (PubMed:16644721). Can transactivate multiple oncogenes and induce centrosome amplification, chromosome instability and cell transformation. Required for the efficient dephosphorylation and recycling of RAF1 after mitogen activation (PubMed:15664191). Binds and targets PML and BCL6 for degradation in a phosphorylation-dependent manner (PubMed:17828269). Acts as a regulator of JNK cascade by binding to phosphorylated FBXW7, disrupting FBXW7 dimerization and promoting FBXW7 autoubiquitination and degradation: degradation of FBXW7 leads to subsequent stabilization of JUN (PubMed:22608923).

Information sourced from Uniprot.org

Citations

Product Review

Well-cited Academic Publications
KO-Validated 700+ Lines
Technical Support Expert Scientific Team
1-Year Guarantee Antibodies & Proteins