Fusion Proteins
Fusion proteins are made by joining parts of different proteins into one. Labs use them for tags, purification, tracking, or to combine two activities in a single tool. For example, fluorescent reporters or Fc-fusions are common. What matters most is that both parts still work. If the domains fold right and the linkers don’t get in the way, the protein stays stable and active. When that happens, experiments run smoother and less time is wasted.

E40KMP1749
Recombinant Human LIGHT Protein, His Tag
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MBS2546291-01
Recombinant Human TNFSF14 / LIGHT / CD258 Protein (His tag)
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MBS2546291-02
Recombinant Human TNFSF14 / LIGHT / CD258 Protein (His tag)
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PKSM041487-01
Recombinant Mouse LIGHT protein (His Tag)
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PKSM041487-02
Recombinant Mouse LIGHT protein (His Tag)
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KMP2026
Recombinant Human LIGHT Protein, His Tag
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KMP1749
Recombinant Human LIGHT Protein, His Tag
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MBS8432652
Human LIGHT/TNFSF14 Recombinant Protein His Tag Lyophilized
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E40KMP2026
Recombinant Human LIGHT Protein, His Tag
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IHULIGHTTNFSF14RHISLY100UG
Human LIGHT / TNFSF14 Recombinant Protein His Tag Lyophilized
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PKSH034125-01
Recombinant Human LIGHT, Human protein (His Tag)
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PKSH034125-02
Recombinant Human LIGHT, Human protein (His Tag)
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PKSH033498-01
Recombinant Human TNFSF14/LIGHT Protein (His Tag)
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PKSH033498-02
Recombinant Human TNFSF14/LIGHT Protein (His Tag)
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E40KMH1340
Recombinant Human LIGHT/TNFSF14 Protein, His Tag
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KMH1340
Recombinant Human LIGHT/TNFSF14 Protein, His Tag
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PKSH031639
Recombinant Human TNFSF14/LIGHT Protein (His Tag)
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