Skip to product information
1 of 1

Gene Bio Systems

LIN28A Antibody - Cat. #: CSB-PA549629

LIN28A Antibody - Cat. #: CSB-PA549629

SKU:CSB-PA549629

Regular price $484.78 CAD
Regular price Sale price $484.78 CAD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Size :50ul

Clone Number:

Aliases:AL024421 antibody; CSDD1 antibody; CSDD2 antibody; FLJ12457 antibody; Lin 28 antibody; Lin 28 homolog (C. elegans) antibody; Lin 28 homolog A (C. elegans) antibody; Lin 28 homolog A antibody; Lin 28 homolog antibody; Lin-28A antibody; Lin28 antibody; Lin28, C. elegans, homolog of, A antibody; LIN28A antibody; LN28A_HUMAN antibody; Protein lin-28 homolog A antibody; Protein lin-28 homolog B antibody; RNA binding protein lin 28 antibody; Tex17 antibody; ZCCHC1 antibody; Zinc finger CCHC domain containing 1 antibody; Zinc finger CCHC domain containing protein 1 antibody; Zinc finger CCHC domain-containing protein 1 antibody

Product Type:Polyclonal Antibody

Immunogen Species:Homo sapiens (Human)

UniProt ID:Q9H9Z2

Immunogen:Synthetic peptide of Human LIN28A

Raised in:Rabbit

Species Reactivity:Human, Mouse

Tested Applications:ELISA, IHC; ELISA:1:1000-1:2000, IHC:1:25-1:100

Background:LIN-28 is a highly conserved, RNA-binding, cytoplasmic protein. It consists of a cold shock domain and retroviral-type (CCHC) zinc finger motifs that were first identified in Caenorhabditis elegans. LIN-28 controls the timing of events during embryonic development and is readily expressed in embryos, embryonic stem cells and embryonal carcinoma cells. The presence of LIN-28 persists in some adult tissues including cardiac and skeletal muscle. In differentiating myoblasts, LIN-28 increases protein synthesis efficiency and binds to the growth and differentiation factor IGF-II.

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:LIN28A

Research Areas:Epigenetics and Nuclear Signaling?Neuroscience;Developmental biology;Stem cells

View full details