Human Sonic Hedgehog Protein (SHH) Protein

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234€ (5 µg)

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935106861
info@markelab.com
name
Human Sonic Hedgehog Protein (SHH) Protein
category
Proteins and Peptides
provider
Abbexa
reference
abx260616
tested applications
SDS-PAGE

Description

Sonic HedgeHog, His Tag Protein is a recombinant cytokine.

Documents del producto

Instrucciones
Data sheet
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Product specifications

Category
Proteins and Peptides
Immunogen Target
Sonic Hedgehog Protein (SHH)
Origin
Human
Conjugation
Unconjugated
Observed MW
Tag: His tag
Expression
Recombinant
Purity
> 95% (SDS-PAGE)
Size 1
5 µg
Size 2
25 µg
Size 3
1 mg
Form
Liquid
Tested Applications
SDS-PAGE
Availability
Shipped within 5-10 working days.
Dry Ice
No
UniProt ID
Q15465
Background
Protein SHH
Status
RUO
Note
This product is for research use only.   Not for human consumption, cosmetic, therapeutic or diagnostic use.

Descripción

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This gene encodes a protein that is instrumental in patterning the early embryo. It has been implicated as the key inductive signal in patterning of the ventral neural tube, the anterior-posterior limb axis, and the ventral somites. Of three human proteins showing sequence and functional similarity to the sonic hedgehog protein of Drosophila, this protein is the most similar. The protein is made as a precursor that is autocatalytically cleaved; the N-terminal portion is soluble and contains the signalling activity while the C-terminal portion is involved in precursor processing. More importantly, the C-terminal product covalently attaches a cholesterol moiety to the N-terminal product, restricting the N-terminal product to the cell surface and preventing it from freely diffusing throughout the developing embryo. Defects in this protein or in its signalling pathway are a cause of holoprosencephaly (HPE), a disorder in which the developing forebrain fails to correctly separate into right and left hemispheres. HPE is manifested by facial deformities. It is also thought that mutations in this gene or in its signalling pathway may be responsible for VACTERL syndrome, which is characterized by vertebral defects, anal atresia, tracheoesophageal fistula with esophageal atresia, radial and renal dysplasia, cardiac anomalies, and limb abnormalities. Additionally, mutations in a long range enhancer located approximately 1 megabase upstream of this gene disrupt limb patterning and can result in preaxial polydactyly.

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