Comparison

PAX3 Antibody

Item no. E91675
Manufacturer Enogene
Amount 100 ul
Quantity options 100 ul 100 ul
Category
Type Antibody
Applications WB, IHC
Specific against Human (Homo sapiens), Mouse (Murine, Mus musculus), Rat (Rattus norvegicus)
Host Rabbit
ECLASS 10.1 32160702
ECLASS 11.0 32160702
UNSPSC 12352203
Alias PAX3, CDHS, HUP2, WS1, WS3, Paired box protein Pax-3, HuP2 ,
Available
Manufacturer - Conjugate / Tag
This antibody is also available with the following conjugates:
AF350, AF405L, AF405M, AF405S, AF488, AF514, AF532, AF546, AF555, AF568, AF594, AF610, AF635, AF647, AF680, AF700, AF750, AF790, APC, AP, Biotin, Cy3, Cy5.5, Cy5, Cy7, FITC, HRP, PE, Magnetic beads (1 um, 2.8 um, 3 um, 4.5 um, 5 um, 10 um, 15 um, 20 um, 30 um, or different size option)
Please contact sales@hoelzel.de for pricing and availability.
Storage Conditions
Store at -20C or -80oC. Avoid freeze / thaw cycles. Buffer: PBS with 0.02% sodium azide, 50% glycerol, pH7.3.
Molecular Weight
50kDa
Immunogen
Recombinant proteinof human PAX3
Purification
Affinity purification
Research Area
Autophagy antibody, Cancer, Cardiovascular, Cell Biology, Epigenetics and Nuclear Signaling, Developmental Biologys, Immunology, Drug Discovery Products, Metabolism, Neuroscience, Signal Transduction, Stem Cells
Background
Paired box (PAX) proteins are a family of transcription factors that play important and diverse roles in animal development (1). Nine PAX proteins (PAX1-9) have been described in humans and other mammals. They are defined by the presence of an amino-terminal "paired" domain, consisting of two helix-turn-helix motifs, with DNA binding activity (2). PAX proteins are classified into four structurally distinct subgroups (I-IV) based on the absence or presence of a carboxy-terminal homeodomain and a central octapeptide region. Subgroup I (PAX1 and 9) contains the octapeptide but lacks the homeodomain; subgroup II (PAX2, 5, and 8) contains the octapeptide and a truncated homeodomain; subgroup III (PAX3 and 7) contains the octapeptide and a complete homeodomain; and subgroup IV (PAX4 and 6) contains a complete homeodomain but lacks the octapeptide region (2). PAX proteins play critically important roles in development by regulating transcriptional networks responsible for embryonic patterning and organogenesis (3); a subset of PAX proteins also maintain functional importance during postnatal development (4). Research studies have implicated genetic mutations that result in aberrant expression of PAX genes in a number of cancer subtypes (1-3), with members of subgroups II and III identified as potential mediators of tumor progression (2).
CiteID
EN0131653

Note: The presented information and documents (Manual, Product Datasheet, Safety Datasheet and Certificate of Analysis) correspond to our latest update and should serve for orientational purpose only. We do not guarantee the topicality. We would kindly ask you to make a request for specific requirements, if necessary.

All products are intended for research use only (RUO). Not for human, veterinary or therapeutic use.

Amount: 100 ul
Available: In stock
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