CTSC Lentiviral Vector (Human) (EF1a) (pLenti-GIII-EF1a)
-
Catalog number
LV129868
-
Price
Please ask
-
Size
1.0 µg DNA
-
-
DNA lentivector for transduction information
Lentiveral packaging plasmid DNA for non-viral plasmid transfection and direct use in plasmid expression. This DNA can alos be used for packaging into Lentiviral particles for high efficiency transduction and stably integrated expressions. GENTAUR suggests to use our ABM packaging mix LV003 of second generation virusses or the LV053, our 3rd Generation Packaging mixture. pLenti lentiviral plasmids DNAs are stored in 10milliMolar Tris/HCI with 1mM EDTA at a pH of 8 at -25 C. Vectors with selection markers like kanamycin, puromycin or cumate are available.
-
-
-
Properties
Human proteins, cDNA and human recombinants are used in human reactive ELISA kits and to produce anti-human mono and polyclonal antibodies. Modern humans (Homo sapiens, primarily ssp. Homo sapiens sapiens). Depending on the epitopes used human ELISA kits can be cross reactive to many other species. Mainly analyzed are human serum, plasma, urine, saliva, human cell culture supernatants and biological samples.
-
Gene target
-
Gene symbol
PLA2G3, CTSC
-
Short name
CTSC Lentiviral Vector ( ) (EF1a) (pLenti-GIII-EF1a)
-
Technique
Vectors
-
Species
Human, Humans
-
Alternative name
cathepsin C Lentiviral integrating Desoxyribonucleic acid sequence (H. sapiens) (EF1a) (pLenti-GIII-EF1a)
-
Alternative to gene target
cathepsin C, CPPI and DPP-I and DPP1 and DPPI and HMS and JP and JPD and PALS and PDON1 and PLS, CTSC and IDBG-67143 and ENSG00000109861 and 1075, chaperone binding, Extracellular, Ctsc and IDBG-198191 and ENSMUSG00000030560 and 13032, BT.49573 and IDBG-641862 and ENSBTAG00000011100 and 352958
-
Gene info
Gene info
-
Identity
-
Gene
-
Long gene name
cathepsin C
-
Synonyms gene
-
Synonyms
-
Synonyms name
-
GenBank acession
-
Locus
-
Discovery year
1995-11-08
-
Entrez gene record
-
Pubmed identfication
-
RefSeq identity
-
Classification
-
VEGA ID
-
Locus Specific Databases
MeSH Data
-
Name
-
Concept
Scope note:
The transfer of bacterial DNA by phages from an infected bacterium to another bacterium. This also refers to the transfer of genes into eukaryotic cells by viruses. This naturally occurring process is routinely employed as a GENE TRANSFER TECHNIQUE.
-
Tree numbers
-
Qualifiers
ethics, trends, veterinary, history, classification, economics, instrumentation, methods, standards, statistics & numerical data
Product images
Similar products