Macroautophagy is the major inducible pathway for the general turnover of cytoplasmic constituents in eukaryotic cells, it is also responsible for the degradation of active cytoplasmic enzymes and organelles during nutrient starvation. Macroautophagy involves the formation of double-membrane bound autophagosomes which enclose the cytoplasmic constituent targeted for degradation in a membrane bound structure, which then fuse with the lysosome (or vacuole) releasing a single-membrane bound autophagic bodies which are then degraded within the lysosome (or vacuole). MAP1A and MAP1B are microtubule-associated proteins which mediate the physical interactions between microtubules and components of the cytoskeleton. These proteins are involved in formation of autophagosomal vacuoles (autophagosomes). MAP1A and MAP1B each consist of a heavy chain subunit and multiple light chain subunits. MAP1LC3a is one of the light chain subunits and can associate with either MAP1A or MAP1B. The precursor molecule is cleaved by APG4B/ATG4B to form the cytosolic form, LC3-I. This is activated by APG7L/ATG7, transferred to ATG3 and conjugated to phospholipid to form the membrane-bound form, LC3-II.
Primary Antibodies
Polyclonal
Human
LC3 (APG8A)
Rabbit
Unconjugated
Liquid
ELISA, WB, IF/ICC
Purified through a protein G column, eluted with high and low pH buffers and neutralized immediately, followed by dialysis against PBS.
PBS containing 0.09% sodium azide.
80 µl
400 µl
Aliquot and store at -20°C. Avoid repeated freeze/thaw cycles.
LC3 (APG8A)
No
Shipped within 5-10 working days.
NP_115903.1, NP_852610.1
This product is for research use only.
Macroautophagy is the major inducible pathway for the general turnover of cytoplasmic constituents in eukaryotic cells, ...
250€ (80 µl)
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