KIF13B Polyclonal Antibody, PE-Cy7 Conjugated
Referência bs-12387R-PE-Cy7
Tamanho : 100ul
Marca : Bioss
KIF13B Polyclonal Antibody, PE-Cy7 Conjugated
Applications
Reactivity
Predicted Reactivity
Overview | |
Catalog # | bs-12387R-PE-Cy7 |
Product Name | KIF13B Polyclonal Antibody, PE-Cy7 Conjugated |
Applications | WB |
Reactivity | Mouse, Rat |
Predicted Reactivity | Human, Cow, Sheep, Pig, Horse |
Specifications | |
Conjugation | PE-Cy7 |
Host | Rabbit |
Source | KLH conjugated synthetic peptide derived from human KIF13B |
Immunogen Range | 351-450/1826 |
Clonality | Polyclonal |
Isotype | IgG |
Concentration | 1ug/ul |
Purification | Purified by Protein A. |
Storage Buffer | Aqueous buffered solution containing 0.01M TBS (pH7.4) with 1% BSA, 0.03% Proclin300 and 50% Glycerol. |
Storage Condition | Store at -20°C. Aliquot into multiple vials to avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles. |
Target | |
Gene ID | 23303 |
Swiss Prot | Q9NQT8 |
Subcellular location | Cytoplasm |
Synonyms | GAKIN; Guanylate kinase associated kinesin; KI13B_HUMAN; KIAA0639; K 13B; K13B; Kinesin 13B; Kinesin family member 13B; Kinesin like protein GAKIN; Kinesin like protein K13B; Kinesin-like protein GAKIN; Kinesin-like protein K13B; OTTHUMP00000225649. |
Background | KIF13B is also known as Kinesin-like protein GAKIN or GAKIN and is a 1,826 amino acid protein that is widely expressed in tissues, with highest expression in brain and kidney. KIF13B is localized to the cytoplasm, as well as to the cytoskeleton, and is thought to be a microtubule-dependent motor protein which is able to bind to a variety of proteins in order to traffic them to various locations throughout the cell. KIF13B belongs to the kinesin-like protein family and possesses three domains typical of the kinesin-like protein family, namely an N-terminal motor domain with an ATP-binding motif, an FHA domain which is known to bind diverse cargos and a large stalk domain involved in protein-protein binding. Additionally, KIF13B has a microtubule-interacting sequence which is known as the CAP-Gly domain at its C-terminus. The CAP-Gly domain is highly conserved domain among eukaryotes, and in humans, defects in the CAP-Gly domain are implicated in many diseases affecting the trafficking of vesicles, neuromuscular junctions and lysosome proliferation. |
Application Dilution | |
WB | 1:300-5000 |