Tight Junction Protein ZO 3 Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody

Tight Junction Protein ZO 3 Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody

Size1:50μl Price1:$158
Size2:100μl Price2:$288
Size3:500μl Price3:$1200
SKU: AMRe02790 Category: Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody Tags: , , ,

Datasheet

Summary

Production Name

Tight Junction Protein ZO 3 Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody

Description

Recombinant Rabbit Monoclonal antibody

Host

Rabbit

Application

WB

Reactivity

Human,Rat

 

Performance

Conjugation

Unconjugated

Modification

Unmodified

Isotype

IgG

Clonality

Monoclonal Antibody

Form

Liquid

Storage

Store at 4°C short term. Aliquot and store at -20°C long term. Avoid freeze/thaw cycles.

Buffer

50mM Tris-Glycine(pH 7.4), 0.15M NaCl, 40% Glycerol, 0.01% Sodium azide and 0.05% BSA

Purification

Affinity Purified

 

Immunogen

Gene Name

TJP3

Alternative Names

ZO3; ZO-3

Gene ID

27134

SwissProt ID

O95049

 

Application

Dilution Ratio

WB: 1/500-1/1000

Molecular Weight

Calculated MW: 101 kDa; Observed MW: 140 kDa

 

Background

TJP1, TJP2, and TJP3 are closely related scaffolding proteins that link tight junction (TJ) transmembrane proteins such as claudins, junctional adhesion molecules, and occludin to the actin cytoskeleton (PubMed:16129888). The tight junction acts to limit movement of substances through the paracellular space and as a boundary between the compositionally distinct apical and basolateral plasma membrane domains of epithelial and endothelial cells. Binds and recruits PATJ to tight junctions where it connects and stabilizes apical and lateral components of tight junctions (PubMed:16129888). Promotes cell-cycle progression through the sequestration of cyclin D1 (CCND1) at tight junctions during mitosis which prevents CCND1 degradation during M-phase and enables S-phase transition (PubMed:21411630). With TJP1 and TJP2, participates to the junctional retention and stability of the transcription factor DBPA, but is not involved in its shuttling to the nucleus . Contrary to TJP2, TJP3 is dispensable for individual viability, embryonic development, epithelial differentiation, and the establishment of TJs, at least in the laboratory environment .

 

Research Area

Signal Transduction