Recombinant Human EFNB1 (C-6His)

Recombinant Human EFNB1 (C-6His)

Size1:10μg price1:$136
Size2:50μg price2:$378
Size3:500μg price3:$1890
SKU: PHH0595 Category: Target Proteins Tags: ,

Datasheet

Name

Recombinant Human EFNB1 (C-6His)

Purity

Greater than 95% as determined by reducing SDS-PAGE

Endotoxin level

<1 EU/µg as determined by LAL test.

Construction

Recombinant Human Ephrin-B1 is produced by our Mammalian expression system and the target gene encoding Leu28-Gly232 is expressed with a 6His tag at the C-terminus.

Accession #

P98172

Host

Human Cells

Species

Human

Predicted Molecular Mass

23.4 KDa

Buffer

Lyophilized from a 0.2 μm filtered solution of 20mM PB, 150mM NaCl, pH 7.4.

Form

Lyophilized

Shipping

The product is shipped at ambient temperature.Upon receipt, store it immediately at the temperature listed below.

Stability&Storage

Store at ≤-70°C, stable for 6 months after receipt.Store at ≤-70°C, stable for 3 months under sterile conditions after opening. Please minimize freeze-thaw cycles.

Reconstitution

Always centrifuge tubes before opening.Do not mix by vortex or pipetting.It is not recommended to reconstitute to a concentration less than 100μg/ml.Dissolve the lyophilized protein in distilled water.Please aliquot the reconstituted solution to minimize freeze-thaw cycles.

 

 

 

Alternative Names

Ephrin-B1;EFL-3; ELK ligand; EPH-related receptor tyrosine kinase ligand 2;LERK-2

 

Background

Ephrin-B1, also named EFL-3, ELK ligand, EPH-related receptor tyrosine kinase ligand 2, is a single-pass type I membrane protein. It contains 1 ephrin RBD (ephrin receptor-binding) domain and belongs to the ephrin family. Ephrins are divided into the ephrin-A (EFNA) class, which are anchored to the membrane by a glycosylphosphatidylinositol linkage, and the ephrin-B (EFNB) class, which are transmembrane proteins. All ephrins share a conserved extracellular sequence, which most likely corresponds to the receptor-binding domain. Ephrin-B1 has been shown to bind EphA3, EphB1, EphB2, EphB3, and EphB4. The extracellular domains of human and mouse ephrin-B1 share 94% amino acid identity.

 

Note

For Research Use Only , Not for Diagnostic Use.