Recombinant Human Podocalyxin (PODXL), partial

CAT:
399-CSB-EP518830HU-01
Size:
20 µg

For Laboratory Research Only. Not for Clinical or Personal Use.

  • Availability: 24/48H Stock Items & 2 to 6 Weeks non Stock Items.
  • Dry Ice Shipment: No
Recombinant Human Podocalyxin (PODXL), partial - image 1

Recombinant Human Podocalyxin (PODXL), partial

  • Product Name Alternative:

    GCTM-2 antigen; Gp200Podocalyxin-like protein 1 ; PC ; PCLP-1
  • Abbreviation:

    Recombinant Human PODXL protein, partial
  • Gene Name:

    PODXL
  • UniProt:

    O00592
  • Expression Region:

    32-458aa
  • Organism:

    Homo sapiens (Human)
  • Target Sequence:

    QNATQTTTDSSNKTAPTPASSVTIMATDTAQQSTVPTSKANEILASVKATTLGVSSDSPGTTTLAQQVSGPVNTTVARGGGSGNPTTTIESPKSTKSADTTTVATSTATAKPNTTSSQNGAEDTTNSGGKSSHSVTTDLTSTKAEHLTTPHPTSPLSPRQPTSTHPVATPTSSGHDHLMKISSSSSTVAIPGYTFTSPGMTTTLLETVFHHVSQAGLELLTSGDLPTLASQSAGITASSVISQRTQQTSSQMPASSTAPSSQETVQPTSPATALRTPTLPETMSSSPTAASTTHRYPKTPSPTVAHESNWAKCEDLETQTQSEKQLVLNLTGNTLCAGGASDEKLISLICRAVKATFNPAQDKCGIRLASVPGSQTVVVKEITIHTKLPAKDVYERLKDKWDELKEAGVSDMKLGDQGPPEEAEDRF
  • Tag:

    N-terminal 6xHis-tagged
  • Type:

    In Stock Protein
  • Source:

    E.coli
  • Field of Research:

    Cancer
  • Relevance:

    Involved in the regulation of both adhesion and cell morphology and cancer progression. Function as an anti-adhesive molecule that maintains an open filtration pathway between neighboring foot processes in the podocyte by charge repulsion. Acts as a pro-adhesive molecule, enhancing the adherence of cells to immobilized ligands, increasing the rate of migration and cell-cell contacts in an integrin-dependent manner. Induces the formation of apical actin-dependent microvilli. Involved in the formation of a preapical plasma mbrane subdomain to set up inital epithelial polarization and the apical lumen formation during renal tubulogenesis. Plays a role in cancer development and aggressiveness by inducing cell migration and invasion through its interaction with the actin-binding protein EZR. Affects EZR-dependent signaling events, leading to increased activities of the MAPK and PI3K pathways in cancer cells.
  • Endotoxin:

    Not test
  • Purity:

    Greater than 90% as determined by SDS-PAGE.
  • Activity:

    Not Test
  • Form:

    Liquid or Lyophilized powder
  • Buffer:

    If the delivery form is liquid, the default storage buffer is Tris/PBS-based buffer, 5%-50% glycerol. If the delivery form is lyophilized powder, the buffer before lyophilization is Tris/PBS-based buffer, 6% Trehalose, pH 8.0.
  • Reconstitution:

    We recommend that this vial be briefly centrifuged prior to opening to bring the contents to the bottom. Please reconstitute protein in deionized sterile water to a concentration of 0.1-1.0 mg/mL.We recommend to add 5-50% of glycerol (final concentration) and aliquot for long-term storage at -20°C/-80°C. Our default final concentration of glycerol is 50%. Customers could use it as reference.
  • Function:

    Involved in the regulation of both adhesion and cell morphology and cancer progression. Function as an anti-adhesive molecule that maintains an open filtration pathway between neighboring foot processes in the podocyte by charge repulsion. Acts as a pro-adhesive molecule, enhancing the adherence of cells to immobilized ligands, increasing the rate of migration and cell-cell contacts in an integrin-dependent manner. Induces the formation of apical actin-dependent microvilli. Involved in the formation of a preapical plasma membrane subdomain to set up inital epithelial polarization and the apical lumen formation during renal tubulogenesis. Plays a role in cancer development and aggressiveness by inducing cell migration and invasion through its interaction with the actin-binding protein EZR. Affects EZR-dependent signaling events, leading to increased activities of the MAPK and PI3K pathways in cancer cells.
  • Molecular Weight:

    48.2 kDa
  • References & Citations:

    Totoki Y., Toyoda A., Takeda T., Sakaki Y., Tanaka A., Yokoyama S. The DNA sequence of human chromosome 7.Hillier L.W., Fulton R.S., Fulton L.A., Graves T.A., Pepin K.H., Wagner-McPherson C., Layman D., Maas J., Jaeger S., Walker R., Wylie K., Sekhon M., Becker M.C., O'Laughlin M.D., Schaller M.E., Fewell G.A., Delehaunty K.D., Miner T.L. , Nash W.E., Cordes M., Du H., Sun H., Edwards J., Bradshaw-Cordum H., Ali J., Andrews S., Isak A., Vanbrunt A., Nguyen C., Du F., Lamar B., Courtney L., Kalicki J., Ozersky P., Bielicki L., Scott K., Holmes A., Harkins R., Harris A., Strong C.M., Hou S., Tomlinson C., Dauphin-Kohlberg S., Kozlowicz-Reilly A., Leonard S., Rohlfing T., Rock S.M., Tin-Wollam A.-M., Abbott A., Minx P., Maupin R., Strowmatt C., Latreille P., Miller N., Johnson D., Murray J., Woessner J.P., Wendl M.C., Yang S.-P., Schultz B.R., Wallis J.W., Spieth J., Bieri T.A., Nelson J.O., Berkowicz N., Wohldmann P.E., Cook L.L., Hickenbotham M.T., Eldred J., Williams D., Bedell J.A., Mardis E.R., Clifton S.W., Chissoe S.L., Marra M.A., Raymond C., Haugen E., Gillett W., Zhou Y., James R., Phelps K., Iadanoto S., Bubb K., Simms E., Levy R., Clendenning J., Kaul R., Kent W.J., Furey T.S., Baertsch R.A., Brent M.R., Keibler E., Flicek P., Bork P., Suyama M., Bailey J.A., Portnoy M.E., Torrents D., Chinwalla A.T., Gish W.R., Eddy S.R., McPherson J.D., Olson M.V., Eichler E.E., Green E.D., Waterston R.H., Wilson R.K.Nature 424:157-164 (2003)
  • Storage Conditions:

    The shelf life is related to many factors, storage state, buffer ingredients, storage temperature and the stability of the protein itself. Generally, the shelf life of liquid form is 6 months at -20°C/-80°C. The shelf life of lyophilized form is 12 months at -20°C/-80°C.
  • Protein Length:

    Partial