Description:

Size: 100ul

Catalog no.: bs-7594R-A555

Price: 380 EUR

Product details

Gene ID Number

286

Modification Site

None

Tested applications

IF(IHC-P)

French translation

anticorps

Modification

Unmodified

Clonality

Polyclonal

Excitation emission

553nm/568nm

Concentration

1ug per 1ul

Crossreactivity

Human, Mouse, Rat

Conjugated with

ALEXA FLUOR® 555

Target Antigen

Ankyrin erythroid

Recommended dilutions

IF(IHC-P)(1:50-200)

Clone

Polyclonal antibody

Purification

Purified by Protein A.

Conjugation

Alexa Fluor,ALEXA FLUOR 555

Category

Conjugated Primary Antibodies

Host Organism

Rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus)

Also known as

Anti-Ankyrin erythroid PAb ALEXA FLUOR 555

Specificity

This is a highly specific antibody against Ankyrin erythroid.

Long name

Ankyrin erythroid Polyclonal Antibody, ALEXA FLUOR 555 Conjugated

Cross-reactive species details

Due to limited amount of testing and knowledge, not every possible cross-reactivity is known.

Source

This antibody was obtained by immunization of the host with KLH conjugated synthetic peptide derived from human Ankyrin erythroid

Synonyms

ANK; ANK-1; Ank1; ANK1_HUMAN; Ankyrin 1; Ankyrin 1, erythrocytic; Ankyrin R; Ankyrin-1; Ankyrin-R; Erythrocyte ankyrin; SPH1; SPH2.

Storage conditions

Store this antibody in aqueous buffered solution containing 1% BSA, 50% glycerol and 0.09% sodium azide. Keep refrigerated at 2 to 8 degrees Celcius for up to one year.

Properties

For facs or microscopy Alexa 1 conjugate.Very high photo stable ALEXA conjugate.If you buy Antibodies supplied by Bioss Primary Conjugated Antibodies. ALEXA FLUOR they should be stored frozen at - 24°C for long term storage and for short term at + 5°C.

Background of the antigen

Ankyrins are a family of proteins that link the integral membrane proteins to the underlying spectrin-actin cytoskeleton and play key roles in activities such as cell motility, activation, proliferation, contact and the maintenance of specialized membrane domains. Multiple isoforms of ankyrin with different affinities for various target proteins are expressed in a tissue-specific, developmentally regulated manner. Most ankyrins are typically composed of three structural domains: an amino-terminal domain containing multiple ankyrin repeats; a central region with a highly conserved spectrin binding domain; and a carboxy-terminal regulatory domain which is the least conserved and subject to variation. Ankyrin 1, the prototype of this family, was first discovered in the erythrocytes, but since has also been found in brain and muscles. Mutations in erythrocytic ankyrin 1 have been associated in approximately half of all patients with hereditary spherocytosis. Complex patterns of alternative splicing in the regulatory domain, giving rise to different isoforms of ankyrin 1 have been described. Truncated muscle-specific isoforms of ankyrin1 resulting from usage of an alternate promoter have also been identified. [provided by RefSeq, Dec 2008].