Gene Bio Systems
KPNB1 Antibody - Cat. #: CSB-PA244093
KPNB1 Antibody - Cat. #: CSB-PA244093
SKU:CSB-PA244093
Couldn't load pickup availability
Size :50ul
Clone Number:
Aliases:IMB 1 antibody; IMB1 antibody; IMB1_HUMAN antibody; Impnb antibody; Importin 90 antibody; Importin beta 1 antibody; Importin beta 1 subunit antibody; Importin subunit beta-1 antibody; Importin-90 antibody; IPOB antibody; Karyopherin beta 1 antibody; Karyopherin beta 1 subunit antibody; Karyopherin subunit beta-1 antibody; KPNB 1 antibody; Kpnb1 antibody; MGC2155 antibody; MGC2156 antibody; MGC2157 antibody; NTF 97 antibody; NTF97 antibody; NTF97/Importin beta antibody; Nuclear factor P97 antibody; Pore targeting complex 97 kDa subunit antibody; PTAC97 antibody
Product Type:Polyclonal Antibody
Immunogen Species:Homo sapiens (Human)
UniProt ID:Q14974
Immunogen:Synthetic peptide of Human KPNB1
Raised in:Rabbit
Species Reactivity:Human, Mouse, Rat
Tested Applications:ELISA, IHC; ELISA:1:2000-1:10000, IHC:1:50-1:200
Background:Nucleocytoplasmic transport, a signal- and energy-dependent process, takes place through nuclear pore complexes embedded in the nuclear envelope. The import of proteins containing a nuclear localization signal (NLS) requires the NLS import receptor, a heterodimer of importin alpha and beta subunits also known as karyopherins. Importin alpha binds the NLS-containing cargo in the cytoplasm and importin beta docks the complex at the cytoplasmic side of the nuclear pore complex. In the presence of nucleoside triphosphates and the small GTP binding protein Ran, the complex moves into the nuclear pore complex and the importin subunits dissociate. Importin alpha enters the nucleoplasm with its passenger protein and importin beta remains at the pore.
Clonality:Polyclonal
Isotype:IgG
Purification Method:Antigen affinity purification
Conjugate:Non-conjugated
Buffer:-20°C, pH7.4 PBS, 0.05% NaN3, 40% Glycerol
Form:Liquid
Stroage:Upon receipt, store at -20°C or -80°C. Avoid repeated freeze.
Target Names:KPNB1
Research Areas:Epigenetics and Nuclear Signaling;Tags & Cell Markers;Signal transduction
