Huntingtin Rabbit pAb- ABclonal,ABclonal,A16872

Reactivity

Human, Mouse, Rat

Application

WB, IHC-P, IF/ICC, ELISA

Platform ID

BAB876880948

ABclonal

Headquarters

500W Cummings Park, Ste. 6500 Woburn, MA 01801

Contact

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Product Specifications
Scientific Background

Specifications

NameHuntingtin Rabbit pAb- ABclonal
Cat. No.A16872
RRID#N/A
IsotypeIgG
ReactivityHuman, Mouse, Rat
ApplicationWB, IHC-P, IF/ICC, ELISA
Working DilutionsWB:1:500 - 1:2000 | IHC-P:1:50 - 1:200 | IF/ICC:1:50 - 1:200 | ELISA:Recommended starting concentration is 1 μg/mL. Please optimize the concentration based on your specific assay requirements.
Molecular Weight347kDa
ImmunogenRecombinant protein (or fragment).This information is considered to be commercially sensitive.
PurityAffinity purification
Appearance/FormLiquid
StorageStore at -20℃. Avoid freeze / thaw cycles.; Buffer: PBS with 0.01% thimerosal, 50% glycerol, pH7.3.
Regulatory StatusResearch Use Only

Scientific Background

Huntingtin is a disease gene linked to Huntington's disease, a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by loss of striatal neurons. This is thought to be caused by an expanded, unstable trinucleotide repeat in the huntingtin gene, which translates as a polyglutamine repeat in the protein product. A fairly broad range of trinucleotide repeats (9-35) has been identified in normal controls, and repeat numbers in excess of 40 have been described as pathological. The huntingtin locus is large, spanning 180 kb and consisting of 67 exons. The huntingtin gene is widely expressed and is required for normal development. It is expressed as 2 alternatively polyadenylated forms displaying different relative abundance in various fetal and adult tissues. The larger transcript is approximately 13.7 kb and is expressed predominantly in adult and fetal brain whereas the smaller transcript of approximately 10.3 kb is more widely expressed. The genetic defect leading to Huntington's disease may not necessarily eliminate transcription, but may confer a new property on the mRNA or alter the function of the protein. One candidate is the huntingtin-associated protein-1, highly expressed in brain, which has increased affinity for huntingtin protein with expanded polyglutamine repeats. This gene contains an upstream open reading frame in the 5' UTR that inhibits expression of the huntingtin gene product through translational repression.

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