INCENP Rabbit pAb- ABclonal,ABclonal,A0622

Reactivity

Human, Rat

Application

WB, ELISA

Conjugate

Unconjugated

Platform ID

BAB609453053

ABclonal

Headquarters

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

Contact

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Product Specifications
Scientific Background

Specifications

NameINCENP Rabbit pAb- ABclonal
Cat. No.A0622
RRID#N/A
IsotypeIgG
ReactivityHuman, Rat
ConjugationUnconjugated
ApplicationWB, ELISA
Working DilutionsWB:1:500 - 1:2000 | ELISA:Recommended starting concentration is 1 μg/mL. Please optimize the concentration based on your specific assay requirements.
Molecular Weight120-140kDa
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 containing 50% glycerol, preserved with proclin300 or sodium azide (as specified on the Certificate of Analysis), pH 7.3.
Regulatory StatusResearch Use Only

Scientific Background

In mammalian cells, 2 broad groups of centromere-interacting proteins have been described: constitutively binding centromere proteins and 'passenger,' or transiently interacting, proteins (reviewed by Choo, 1997). The constitutive proteins include CENPA (centromere protein A; MIM 117139), CENPB (MIM 117140), CENPC1 (MIM 117141), and CENPD (MIM 117142). The term 'passenger proteins' encompasses a broad collection of proteins that localize to the centromere during specific stages of the cell cycle (Earnshaw and Mackay, 1994 [PubMed 8088460]). These include CENPE (MIM 117143); MCAK (MIM 604538); KID (MIM 603213); cytoplasmic dynein (e.g., MIM 600112); CliPs (e.g., MIM 179838); and CENPF/mitosin (MIM 600236). The inner centromere proteins (INCENPs) (Earnshaw and Cooke, 1991 [PubMed 1860899]), the initial members of the passenger protein group, display a broad localization along chromosomes in the early stages of mitosis but gradually become concentrated at centromeres as the cell cycle progresses into mid-metaphase. During telophase, the proteins are located within the midbody in the intercellular bridge, where they are discarded after cytokinesis (Cutts et al., 1999 [PubMed 10369859]).

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