Human High Mobility Group Protein B3 (HMGB3) Protein

195€ (10 µg)
Por favor contáctenos para obtener información detallada sobre el precio y disponibilidad.
935106861
info@markelab.com
name
Human High Mobility Group Protein B3 (HMGB3) Protein
category
Proteins and Peptides
provider
Abbexa
reference
abx650468
tested applications
WB, SDS-PAGE
Description
Human HMGB3 Protein is a recombinant Human protein produced in a Prokaryotic expression system (E. coli).
Documents del producto
Instrucciones
Data sheet
Product specifications
Category | Proteins and Peptides |
Immunogen Target | High Mobility Group Protein B3 (HMGB3) |
Host | E. coli |
Origin | Human |
Conjugation | Unconjugated |
Observed MW | Molecular Weight: Calculated MW: 22.2 kDa Observed MW (SDS-PAGE): 26 kDa Concentration: Prior to lyophilization: 200 µg/ml Sequence Fragment: Ser14-Ala176 Tag: N-terminal His tag |
Expression | Recombinant |
Purity | > 95% |
Size 1 | 10 µg |
Size 2 | 50 µg |
Size 3 | 100 µg |
Size 4 | 200 µg |
Size 5 | 500 µg |
Form | Lyophilized Reconstitute in ddH2O to a concentration of 0.1-1.0 mg/ml. Do not vortex. |
Tested Applications | WB, SDS-PAGE |
Buffer | Prior to lyophilization: 100 mM NaHCO<sub>3</sub>, 500 mM NaCl, pH 8.3, containing 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT, 0.01% Sarcosyl, 5% Trehalose and Proclin-300. |
Availability | Shipped within 5-7 working days. |
Storage | Store at 2-8 °C for up to one month. Store at -80 °C for up to one year. Avoid repeated freeze/thaw cycles. |
Dry Ice | No |
UniProt ID | O15347 |
Background | Protein HMGB3 |
Status | RUO |
Note | This product is for research use only. Not for human consumption, cosmetic, therapeutic or diagnostic use. |
Descripción
Related Products

Human HMGB3 (High mobility group protein B3) ELISA Kit
Ver Producto
Recombinant Human HMGB3
Ver Producto
High Mobility Group Protein B3 (HMGB3) Antibody
HMGB3 belongs to the high mobility group (HMG) protein superfamily. Like HMG1 (MIM 163905) and HMG2 (MIM 163906), HMGB3 contains DNA-binding HMG box domains and is classified into the HMG box subfamily. Members of the HMG box subfamily are thought to play a fundamental role in DNA replication, nucleosome assembly and transcription (Wilke et al., 1997 [PubMed 9370291]; Nemeth et al., 2006 [PubMed 16945912]).
Ver Producto