Anti-Clostridium difficile Toxin A antibody,Abcam,AB252773

Host

Goat

Application

ELISA

Platform ID

BAB702385895

Abcam

Headquarters

Discovery Drive Cambridge Biomedical Campus Cambridge CB2 0AX UK

Contact

Tel: +44 (0)1223 696000
Fax: +44 (0)1223 215 215

Product Specifications
Scientific Background

Specifications

NameAnti-Clostridium difficile Toxin A antibody
Cat. No.AB252773
HostGoat
IsotypeIgG
ApplicationELISA
ClonalityPolyclonal
Concentration5 mg/mL Batch dependent concentration
PurityAffinity purification Immunogen
Appearance/FormLiquid
ShippingBlue Ice
FormulationPreservative: 0.1% Sodium azide Constituents: PBS
Storage-20°C
Regulatory StatusResearch Use Only

Scientific Background

Target data Toxin A. Precursor of a cytotoxin that targets and disrupts the colonic epithelium, inducing the host inflammatory and innate immune responses and resulting in diarrhea and pseudomembranous colitis (PubMed : 20844489). TcdA and TcdB constitute the main toxins that mediate the pathology of C.difficile infection, an opportunistic pathogen that colonizes the colon when the normal gut microbiome is disrupted (PubMed : 19252482, PubMed : 20844489). Compared to TcdB, TcdA is less virulent and less important for inducing the host inflammatory and innate immune responses (PubMed : 19252482). This form constitutes the precursor of the toxin : it enters into host cells and mediates autoprocessing to release the active toxin (Glucosyltransferase TcdA) into the host cytosol (By similarity). Targets colonic epithelia by binding to some receptor, and enters host cells via clathrin-mediated endocytosis (By similarity). Binding to LDLR, as well as carbohydrates and sulfated glycosaminoglycans on host cell surface contribute to entry into cells (PubMed : 16622409, PubMed : 1670930, PubMed : 31160825). In contrast to TcdB, Frizzled receptors FZD1, FZD2 and FZD7 do not act as host receptors in the colonic epithelium for TcdA (PubMed : 27680706). Once entered into host cells, acidification in the endosome promotes the membrane insertion of the translocation region and formation of a pore, leading to translocation of the GT44 and peptidase C80 domains across the endosomal membrane (By similarity). This activates the peptidase C80 domain and autocatalytic processing, releasing the N-terminal part (Glucosyltransferase TcdA), which constitutes the active part of the toxin, in the cytosol (PubMed : 17334356, PubMed : 19553670, PubMed : 27571750).. Glucosyltransferase TcdA. Active form of the toxin, which is released into the host cytosol following autoprocessing and inactivates small GTPases (PubMed : 22267739, PubMed : 22747490, PubMed : 24905543, PubMed : 30622517, PubMed : 7775453). Acts by mediating monoglucosylation of small GTPases of the Rho family (Rac1, RhoA, RhoB, RhoC, Rap2A and Cdc42) in host cells at the conserved threonine residue located in the switch I region ('Thr-37/35'), using UDP-alpha-D-glucose as the sugar donor (PubMed : 22267739, PubMed : 22747490, PubMed : 24905543, PubMed : 30622517, PubMed : 7775453). Monoglucosylation of host small GTPases completely prevents the recognition of the downstream effector, blocking the GTPases in their inactive form, leading to actin cytoskeleton disruption and cell death, resulting in the loss of colonic epithelial barrier function (PubMed : 7775453). Also able to catalyze monoglucosylation of some members of the Ras family (H-Ras/HRAS, K-Ras/KRAS and N-Ras/NRAS), but with much less efficiency than with Rho proteins, suggesting that it does not act on Ras proteins in vivo (PubMed : 30622517). See full target information tcdA

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