Recombinant Mouse Pleiotrophin (C-6His)

Recombinant Mouse Pleiotrophin (C-6His)

Size1:10μg price1:$90
Size2:50μg price2:$248
Size3:500μg price3:$1250
SKU: PHM1344 Category: Cytokines Tags: ,

Datasheet

Name

Recombinant Mouse Pleiotrophin (C-6His)

Purity

Greater than 95% as determined by reducing SDS-PAGE

Endotoxin level

<1 EU/µg as determined by LAL test.

Construction

Recombinant Mouse Pleiotrophin is produced by our Mammalian expression system and the target gene encoding Gly33-Asp168 is expressed with a 6His tag at the C-terminus.

Accession #

P63089

Host

Human Cells

Species

Mouse

Predicted Molecular Mass

16.1 KDa

Buffer

Lyophilized from a 0.2 μm filtered solution of PBS, 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

Lyophilized protein should be stored at ≤ -20°C, stable for one year after receipt. Reconstituted protein solution can be stored at 2-8°C for 2-7 days. Aliquots of reconstituted samples are stable at ≤ -20°C for 3 months.

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

Pleiotrophin; PTN; Heparin-binding brain mitogen; HBBM; Heparin-binding growth factor 8; HBGF-8; Osteoblast-specific factor 1; OSF-1;

 

Background

Pleiotrophin (PTN) is a secreted, strongly heparinbinding, developmentally regulated cytokine. PTN is a highly conserved protein,Human, mouse, rat, canine, porcine, equine and bovine PTN share 98% aa sequence identity or greater. PTN and midkine share 50% amino acid (aa) sequence identity, share some functions, and constitute a family. During development, PTN is involved in development of brain, bone, and organs undergoing branching morphogenesis. PTN causes PTPRB dimerization and inactivates its phosphatase activity, which allows increased tyrosine phosphorylation of its substrates. Increased expression of PTN is correlated with neuronal development or stresses such as brain ischemia and Parkinson’s disease.

 

Note

For Research Use Only , Not for Diagnostic Use.