NewEast Biosciences pioneered the research and development of the antibodies for GTPases and mutated Oncogene ten years ago. GTPases involve (1) signal transduction in response to activation of cell surface receptors, including transmembrane receptors such as those mediating taste, smell and vision, (2) protein biosynthesis at the ribosome, (3) regulation of cell differentiation, proliferation, division and movement, (4) translocation of proteins through membranes, (5) transport of vesicles within the cell, and vesicle-mediated secretion and uptake, through GTPase control of vesicle coat assembly. An oncogene is a gene that has the potential to cause cancer.
We offer three unique categories of antibodies, which (1) recognize only the active configuration of GTPase (not the inactive one), (2) mutated Oncogene (not mild type) and (3) have super affinity for cAMP and cGMP (no acetylation required). We have over one thousand peer reviewed articles cited our products.
$349.00
Cat.#: S221373 | ||||
Product Name: Anti-PLAAT3 Rabbit Polyclonal Antibody | ||||
Synonyms: AdPLA; HRSL3; HRASLS3; HREV107; PLA2G16; PLAAT-3; H-REV107; HREV107-1; HREV107-3; H-REV107-1 | ||||
UNIPROT ID: P53816 (Gene Accession – NP_009000 ) | ||||
Background: Exhibits both phospholipase A1/2 and acyltransferase activities (PubMed:19615464, PubMed:19047760, PubMed:22825852, PubMed:22605381, PubMed:26503625). Shows phospholipase A1 (PLA1) and A2 (PLA2) activity, catalyzing the calcium-independent release of fatty acids from the sn-1 or sn-2 position of glycerophospholipids (PubMed:19615464, PubMed:19047760, PubMed:22825852, PubMed:22605381, PubMed:22923616). For most substrates, PLA1 activity is much higher than PLA2 activity (PubMed:19615464). Shows O-acyltransferase activity,catalyzing the transfer of a fatty acyl group from glycerophospholipid to the hydroxyl group of lysophospholipid (PubMed:19615464). Shows N-acyltransferase activity, catalyzing the calcium-independent transfer of a fatty acyl group at the sn-1 position of phosphatidylcholine (PC) and other glycerophospholipids to the primary amine of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), forming N-acylphosphatidylethanolamine (NAPE), which serves as precursor for N-acylethanolamines (NAEs) (PubMed:19615464, PubMed:19047760, PubMed:22825852, PubMed:22605381). Exhibits high N-acyltransferase activity and low phospholipase A1/2 activity (PubMed:22825852). | ||||
Immunogen: Synthetic peptide of human PLAAT3 | ||||
Applications: ELISA, IHC | ||||
Recommended Dilutions: IHC: 25-100; ELISA: 5000-10000 | ||||
Host Species: Rabbit | ||||
Clonality: Rabbit Polyclonal | ||||
Isotype: Immunogen-specific rabbit IgG | ||||
Purification: Antigen affinity purification | ||||
Species Reactivity: Human, Mouse, Rat | ||||
Constituents: PBS (without Mg2+ and Ca2+), pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl, 0.05% Sodium Azide and 40% glycerol | ||||
Research Areas: Cancer | ||||
Storage & Shipping: Store at -20°C. Avoid repeated freezing and thawing | ||||
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