Epigenetics Proteins
Epigenetics proteins are tools lab folks use to study how genes are turned on or off—without changing the DNA itself. These include writers, erasers, and readers of chromatin marks (like methylation, acetylation, etc.), purified so you can test how they work. In many experiments they help answer questions about development, disease, aging, or response to environment. What really matters? Their activity, their specificity, and how consistently they behave from batch to batch. When they do, experiments give cleaner data, fewer surprises, and better insights into gene regulation.

MBS1281410
Recombinant Candida albicans Amino-acid acetyltransferase, mitochondrial (ARG2), partial
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MBS1018270
Recombinant Candida dubliniensis Amino-acid acetyltransferase, mitochondrial (ARG2), partial
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MBS1461057
Recombinant Candida glabrata Amino-acid acetyltransferase, mitochondrial (ARG2), partial
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