Description:

Size: 100 microliters

Catalog no.: GENTObs-15482R-A594

Price: 489 EUR

Product details

Gene ID

5887

Modification site

None

Swiss Prot

P54727

Target Protein/Peptide

hHR23b

Applications

IF(IHC-P)

Excitation emission

590nm/617nm

Concentration

1ug per 1ul

Conjugated with

ALEXA FLUOR® 594

Conjugated

Alexa conjugate 1

Subcellular locations

Cytoplasm, Nucleus

Applications with corresponding dilutions

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

Clonality

Polyclonal Antibody

Clone

Polyclonal Antibodies

Other name

Anti-hHR23b Polyclonal

Purification method

Purified by Protein A.

Group

Polyclonals and antibodies

Also known as

hHR23b Polyclonal Antibody

Type

Conjugated Primary Antibody

Conjugation

Alexa Fluor,ALEXA FLUOR® 594

Host organism

Rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus)

Properties

For facs or microscopy Alexa 1 conjugate.

Specificity

This antibody reacts specifically with hHR23b

Modification

No modification has been applied to this antibody

Antigen Source

KLH conjugated synthetic peptide derived from human hHR23b

Cross reactive species

Human (Homo sapiens), Mouse (Mus musculus), Rat (Rattus norvegicus)

Storage

Water buffered solution containing 100ug/ml BSA, 50% glycerol and 0.09% sodium azide. Store at 4°C for 12 months.

Synonyms

P58; HR23B; HHR23B; UV excision repair protein RAD23 homolog B; XP-C repair-complementing complex 58 kDa protein; RAD23B

Description

This antibody needs to be stored at + 4°C in a fridge short term in a concentrated dilution. Freeze thaw will destroy a percentage in every cycle and should be avoided.

About

Polyclonals can be used for Western blot, immunohistochemistry on frozen slices or parrafin fixed tissues. The advantage is that there are more epitopes available in a polyclonal antiserum to detect the proteins than in monoclonal sera.

Cross Reactive Species details

No significant cross reactivity has been observed for this antibody for the tested species. However, note that due to limited knowledge it is impossible to predict with 100% guarantee that the antibody does not corss react with any other species.

Advisory

Avoid freeze/thaw cycles as they may denaturate the polypeptide chains of the antibody, thus reducing its reactivity, specificity and sensitivity. For antibodies that are in liquid form or reconstituted lyophilized antibodies small amounts could become entrapped on the seal or the walls of the tube. Prior to use briefly centrifuge the vial to gather all the solution on the bottom.

Background information

Multiubiquitin chain receptor involved in modulation of proteasomal degradation. Binds to polyubiquitin chains. Proposed to be capable to bind simultaneously to the 26S proteasome and to polyubiquitinated substrates and to deliver ubiquitinated proteins to the proteasome. May play a role in endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation (ERAD) of misfolded glycoproteins by association with PNGase and delivering deglycosylated proteins to the proteasome. Involved in global genome nucleotide excision repair (GG-NER) by acting as component of the XPC complex. Cooperatively with CETN2 appears to stabilize XPC. May protect XPC from proteasomal degradation. The XPC complex is proposed to represent the first factor bound at the sites of DNA damage and together with other core recognition factors, XPA, RPA and the TFIIH complex, is part of the pre-incision (or initial recognition) complex. The XPC complex recognizes a wide spectrum of damaged DNA characterized by distortions of the DNA helix such as single-stranded loops, mismatched bubbles or single-stranded overhangs. The orientation of XPC complex binding appears to be crucial for inducing a productive NER. XPC complex is proposed to recognize and to interact with unpaired bases on the undamaged DNA strand which is followed by recruitment of the TFIIH complex and subsequent scanning for lesions in the opposite strand in a 5'-to-3' direction by the NER machinery. Cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) which are formed upon UV-induced DNA damage esacpe detection by the XPC complex due to a low degree of structural perurbation. Instead they are detected by the UV-DDB complex which in turn recruits and cooperates with the XPC complex in the respective DNA repair. In vitro, the XPC:RAD23B dimer is sufficient to initiate NER; it preferentially binds to cisplatin and UV-damaged double-stranded DNA and also binds to a variety of chemically and structurally diverse DNA adducts.