Discoidin Domain-Containing Receptor 2 (DDR2) Antibody

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442€ (100 µg)

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935106861
info@markelab.com
name
Discoidin Domain-Containing Receptor 2 (DDR2) Antibody
category
Primary Antibodies
provider
Abbexa
reference
abx461588
tested applications
ELISA

Description

Discoidin Domain-Containing Receptor 2 (DDR2) Antibody is a monoclonal Nanobody expressed in CHO cells for the detection of Human DDR2.

Documents del producto

Instrucciones
Data sheet
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Product specifications

Category
Primary Antibodies
Immunogen Target
Discoidin Domain-Containing Receptor 2 (DDR2)
Host
CHO cells
Reactivity
Human
Clonality
Monoclonal
Conjugation
Unconjugated
Isotype
VHH-8His-Cys-tag
Clone ID
I278
Purity
> 95% (SDS-PAGE)
Purification
Purified by Protein A/G affinity chromatography.
Size 1
100 µg
Size 2
1 mg
Form
Liquid
Tested Applications
ELISA
Buffer
0.01 M PBS, pH 7.4.
Availability
Shipped within 5-12 working days.
Storage
Store at 4 °C if the entire vial will be used within 1 week. Aliquot and store at -20 °C or -80 °C for long-term storage. Avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles.
Dry Ice
No
UniProt ID
Q16832
Gene ID
4921
NCBI Accession
NP_001014796.1
Background
Antibody anti-DDR2
Status
RUO
Note
Concentration: 1 mg/ml -

Descripción

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DDR2 (discoidin domain receptor family, member 2) is one of the largest families of proteins in eukaryotes. The family has been classified in 8 major groups based on sequence comparison of their tyrosine (PTK) or serine/threonine (STK) kinase catalytic domains. Receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) play a key role in the communication of cells with their microenvironment. These molecules are involved in the regulation of cell growth, differentiation, and metabolism. In several cases the biochemical mechanism by which RTKs transduce signals across the membrane has been shown to be ligand induced receptor oligomerization and subsequent intracellular phosphorylation. This autophosphorylation leads to phosphorylation of cytosolic targets as well as association with other molecules, which are involved in pleiotropic effects of signal transduction. RTKs have a tripartite structure with extracellular, transmembrane, and cytoplasmic regions. This gene encodes a member of a novel subclass of RTKs and contains a distinct extracellular region encompassing a factor VIII-like domain. Alternative splicing in the 5' UTR results in multiple transcript variants encoding the same protein.

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