A2M (2T11) Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody

A2M (2T11) Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody

Size1:50μl Price1:$128
Size2:100μl Price2:$230
Size3:500μl Price3:$980
SKU: AMRe06369 Category: Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody Tags: , , , ,

Datasheet

Summary

Production Name

A2M (2T11) Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody

Description

Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody

Host

Rabbit

Application

WB,ELISA

Reactivity

Human

 

Performance

Conjugation

Unconjugated

Modification

Unmodified

Isotype

IgG

Clonality

Monoclonal

Form

Liquid

Storage

Store at 4°C short term. Aliquot and store at -20°C long term. Avoid freeze/thaw cycles.

Buffer

Rabbit IgG in phosphate buffered saline , pH 7.4, 150mM NaCl, 0.02% New type preservative N and 50% glycerol. Store at +4°C short term. Store at -20°C long term. Avoid freeze / thaw cycle.

Purification

Affinity purification

 

Immunogen

Gene Name

A2M

Alternative Names

A2m; Alpha 2M; Alpha-2-macroglobulin; C3 and PZP-like alpha-2-macroglobulin domain-containing protein 5; CPAMD5; FWP007; S863 7;

Gene ID

2

SwissProt ID

P01023

 

Application

Dilution Ratio

WB 1:500-1:2000

Molecular Weight

163kDa

 

Background

Alpha-2-macroglobulin is a protease inhibitor and cytokine transporter. It inhibits many proteases, including trypsin, thrombin and collagenase. A2M is implicated in Alzheimer disease (AD) due to its ability to mediate the clearance and degradation of A-beta, the major component of beta-amyloid deposits. Is able to inhibit all four classes of proteinases by a unique 'trapping' mechanism. This protein has a peptide stretch, called the 'bait region' which contains specific cleavage sites for different proteinases. When a proteinase cleaves the bait region, a conformational change is induced in the protein which traps the proteinase. The entrapped enzyme remains active against low molecular weight substrates (activity against high molecular weight substrates is greatly reduced). Following cleavage in the bait region, a thioester bond is hydrolyzed and mediates the covalent binding of the protein to the proteinase.

 

Research Area