Anti-Werner's syndrome helicase WRN antibody,Abcam,AB200

Host

Rabbit

Reactivity

Human

Application

IHC-P

Platform ID

BAB451816111

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-Werner's syndrome helicase WRN antibody
Cat. No.AB200
HostRabbit
IsotypeIgG
ReactivityHuman
ApplicationIHC-P
ClonalityPolyclonal
ImmunogenSynthetic Peptide within Human WRN aa 1-550. The exact immunogen used to generate this antibody is proprietary information.
Appearance/FormLiquid
ShippingBlue Ice
FormulationPreservative: 0.05% Sodium azide
Storage-20°C
Regulatory StatusResearch Use Only

Scientific Background

Target data Multifunctional enzyme that has magnesium and ATP-dependent 3'-5' DNA-helicase activity on partially duplex substrates (PubMed : 9224595, PubMed : 9288107, PubMed : 9611231). Also has 3'->5' exonuclease activity towards double-stranded (ds)DNA with a 5'-overhang (PubMed : 11863428). Has no nuclease activity towards single-stranded (ss)DNA or blunt-ended dsDNA (PubMed : 11863428). Helicase activity is most efficient with (d)ATP, but (d)CTP will substitute with reduced efficiency; strand displacement is enhanced by single-strand binding-protein (heterotrimeric replication protein A complex, RPA1, RPA2, RPA3) (PubMed : 9611231). Binds preferentially to DNA substrates containing alternate secondary structures, such as replication forks and Holliday junctions. May play an important role in the dissociation of joint DNA molecules that can arise as products of homologous recombination, at stalled replication forks or during DNA repair. Alleviates stalling of DNA polymerases at the site of DNA lesions. Plays a role in the formation of DNA replication focal centers; stably associates with foci elements generating binding sites for RP-A (By similarity). Plays a role in double-strand break repair after gamma-irradiation (PubMed : 9224595, PubMed : 9288107, PubMed : 9611231). Unwinds some G-quadruplex DNA (d(CGG)n tracts); unwinding seems to occur in both 5'-3' and 3'-5' direction and requires a short single-stranded tail (PubMed : 10212265). d(CGG)n tracts have a propensity to assemble into tetraplex structures; other G-rich substrates from a telomeric or IgG switch sequence are not unwound (PubMed : 10212265). Depletion leads to chromosomal breaks and genome instability (PubMed : 33199508). See full target information WRN

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