Pseudomonas putida Phenylacetate-coenzyme A ligase (paaK) -Yeast
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Catalog number
GEN1063090.Yeast
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Price
Please ask
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Size
1000ug
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Long name
Recombinant Pseudomonas putida Phenylacetate-coenzyme A ligase (paaK)
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Alternative names
Phenylacetate-coenzyme A ligase; Phenylacetate-coenzyme A ligase; Phenylacetyl-CoA ligase; PA-CoA ligase
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Gene name
paaK
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Other gene names
paaK; paaF; pcl; PA-CoA ligase
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General description
Phenylacetate-coenzyme A ligase (paaK) is a recombinant protein expressed in Yeast . The protein can be with or without a His-Tag or other tag in accordance to customer's request. All of our recombinant proteins are manufactured in strictly controlled facilities and by using a well established technology which guarantees full batch-to-bact consistency and experiment reproducibility.
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Product category
Recombinant Proteins
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Expression system
Yeast
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Available also expressed in
E Coli ; Yeast ; Baculovirus ; Mammalian Cell
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Purity
Greater than 90% (determined by SDS-PAGE)
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Form
Lyophilized protein
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Storage
This protein can be stored at -20 degrees Celsius. For extended periods of time it is recommended to keep the protein frozen at -40 or -80 degrees Celsius. Avoid cycles of freezing and thawing as they might denaturate the polypeptide chains.
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Applications
This protein can be used as a positive control for applications such as ELISA, IFA, RIA, Western Blot, etc.
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About
Pseudomonas is a Gram-negative bacteria. Pseudomonas genomic sequences are used in medical research. A problem in hostpital is often the Pseudomonas Aeruginosa containing multi drug resistancy properties that are transmitted through plasmids. The MDR property is transmitter by the R plasmid.
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Gene target
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Short name
Phenylacetate-coenzyme A ligase (paaK)
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Host
Yeast, Ascomycota
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Species
Yeast, Pseudomonas, Yeasts
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Alternative name
Pseudomonas putida Phenylacetate-coenzyme A ligase (paaK) -Yeast
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MeSH Data
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Name
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Concept
Scope note:
A DNA amplification technique based upon the ligation of OLIGONUCLEOTIDE PROBES. The probes are designed to exactly match two adjacent sequences of a specific target DNA. The chain reaction is repeated in three steps in the presence of excess probe: (1) heat denaturation of double-stranded DNA, (2) annealing of probes to target DNA, and (3) joining of the probes by thermostable DNA ligase. After the reaction is repeated for 20-30 cycles the production of ligated probe is measured.
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Tree numbers
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Qualifiers
ethics, trends, veterinary, history, classification, economics, instrumentation, methods, standards, statistics & numerical data
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