AhR (3U15) Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody

AhR (3U15) Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody

Size1:50μl Price1:$128
Size2:100μl Price2:$230
Size3:500μl Price3:$980
SKU: AMRe06693 Category: Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody Tags: , ,

Datasheet

Summary

Production Name

AhR (3U15) Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody

Description

Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody

Host

Rabbit

Application

WB

Reactivity

Human

 

Performance

Conjugation

Unconjugated

Modification

Unmodified

Isotype

IgG

Clonality

Monoclonal

Form

Liquid

Storage

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

Buffer

Supplied in 50mM Tris-Glycine(pH 7.4), 0.15M NaCl, 40%Glycerol, 0.01% New type preservative N and 0.05% BSA.

Purification

Affinity purification

 

Immunogen

Gene Name

AHR {ECO:0000303|PubMed:8393992, ECO:0000312|HGNC:HGNC:348}

Alternative Names

Ah receptor; AhR; Class E basic helix-loop-helix protein 76; bHLHe76; AHR;

Gene ID

196

SwissProt ID

P35869

 

Application

Dilution Ratio

WB: 1:1000

Molecular Weight

96kDa

 

Background

The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is a ligand activated transcription factor involved in xenobiotic metabolism, cell cycle regulation, and development in response to both endogenous and environmental signals. Involved in cell-cycle regulation. Likely to play an important role in the development and maturation of many tissues. Ligand-activated transcription factor that enables cells to adapt to changing conditions by sensing compounds from the environment, diet, microbiome and cellular metabolism, and which plays important roles in development, immunity and cancer (PubMed:30373764, PubMed:23275542, PubMed:7961644, PubMed:32818467). Upon ligand binding, translocates into the nucleus, where it heterodimerizes with ARNT and induces transcription by binding to xenobiotic response elements (XRE) (PubMed:30373764, PubMed:23275542, PubMed:7961644). Regulates a variety of biological processes, including angiogenesis, hematopoiesis, drug and lipid metabolism, cell motility and immune modulation (PubMed:12213388). Xenobiotics can act as ligands: upon xenobiotic- binding, activates the expression of multiple phase I and II xenobiotic chemical metabolizing enzyme genes (such as the CYP1A1 gene) (PubMed:7961644). Mediates biochemical and toxic effects of halogenated aromatic hydrocarbons (PubMed:7961644). Next to xenobiotics, natural ligands derived from plants, microbiota, and endogenous metabolism are potent AHR agonists (PubMed:18076143). Tryptophan (Trp) derivatives constitute an important class of endogenous AHR ligands (PubMed:32866000, PubMed:32818467). Acts as a negative regulator of anti-tumor immunity: indoles and kynurenic acid generated by Trp catabolism act as ligand and activate AHR, thereby promoting AHR-driven cancer cell motility and suppressing adaptive immunity (PubMed:32818467). Regulates the circadian clock by inhibiting the basal and circadian expression of the core circadian component PER1 (PubMed:28602820). Inhibits PER1 by repressing the CLOCK-ARNTL/BMAL1 heterodimer mediated transcriptional activation of PER1 (PubMed:28602820). The heterodimer ARNT:AHR binds to core DNA sequence 5'-TGCGTG-3' within the dioxin response element (DRE) of target gene promoters and activates their transcription (PubMed:28602820).

 

Research Area