Anti-HADHA antibody,Abcam,AB54477

This product is manufactured by BioVision, an Abcam company and was previously called 3721 TFP1/HADHA Antibody.

Host

Rabbit

Reactivity

Mouse, Rat, Human

Application

WB

Platform ID

BAB763756423

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-HADHA antibody
Cat. No.AB54477
HostRabbit
IsotypeIgG
ReactivityMouse, Rat, Human
ApplicationWB
ClonalityPolyclonal
Concentration0.5 - 1 mg/mL Batch dependent concentration
ImmunogenSynthetic Peptide within Human HADHA. The exact immunogen used to generate this antibody is proprietary information.
PurityAffinity purification Protein A
Appearance/FormLiquid
ShippingBlue Ice
FormulationPreservative: 0.01% Thimerosal (merthiolate) Constituents: PBS, 30% Glycerol (glycerin, glycerine), 0.5% BSA
Storage-20°C
Regulatory StatusResearch Use Only

Scientific Background

Target data Mitochondrial trifunctional enzyme catalyzes the last three of the four reactions of the mitochondrial beta-oxidation pathway (PubMed : 1550553, PubMed : 29915090, PubMed : 30850536, PubMed : 8135828). The mitochondrial beta-oxidation pathway is the major energy-producing process in tissues and is performed through four consecutive reactions breaking down fatty acids into acetyl-CoA (PubMed : 29915090). Among the enzymes involved in this pathway, the trifunctional enzyme exhibits specificity for long-chain fatty acids (PubMed : 30850536). Mitochondrial trifunctional enzyme is a heterotetrameric complex composed of two proteins, the trifunctional enzyme subunit alpha/HADHA described here carries the 2,3-enoyl-CoA hydratase and the 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase activities while the trifunctional enzyme subunit beta/HADHB bears the 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase activity (PubMed : 29915090, PubMed : 30850536, PubMed : 8135828). Independently of the subunit beta, the trifunctional enzyme subunit alpha/HADHA also has a monolysocardiolipin acyltransferase activity (PubMed : 23152787). It acylates monolysocardiolipin into cardiolipin, a major mitochondrial membrane phospholipid which plays a key role in apoptosis and supports mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes in the generation of ATP (PubMed : 23152787). Allows the acylation of monolysocardiolipin with different acyl-CoA substrates including oleoyl-CoA for which it displays the highest activity (PubMed : 23152787). See full target information HADHA

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