PRKACG Antibody | CSB-PA291799

(No reviews yet) Write a Review
SKU:
CSB-PA291799
Availability:
3 to 7 Working Days
  • PRKACG Antibody
  • The image on the left is immunohistochemistry of paraffin-embedded Human lung cancer tissue using CSB-PA291799 (PRKACG Antibody) at dilution 1/25, on the right is treated with fusion protein. (Original magnification: ×200)
  • The image on the left is immunohistochemistry of paraffin-embedded Human liver cancer tissue using CSB-PA291799 (PRKACG Antibody) at dilution 1/25, on the right is treated with fusion protein. (Original magnification: ×200)
£252.64 - £390.96

Description

PRKACG Antibody | CSB-PA291799 | Cusabio

PRKACG Antibody is Available at Gentaur Genprice with the fastest delivery.

Online Order Payment is possible or send quotation to info@gentaur.com.

Product Type: Polyclonal Antibody

Target Names: PRKACG

Aliases: protein kinase, cAMP-dependent, catalytic, gamma

Background: cAMP-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit gamma is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the PRKACG gene. Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) consists of two catalytic subunits and a regulatory subunit dimer. This gene encodes the gamma form of its catalytic subunit. The gene is intronless and is thought to be a retrotransposon derived from the gene for the alpha form of the PKA catalytic subunit. PRKACG has been shown to interact with Ryanodine receptor 2.

Isotype: IgG

Conjugate: Non-conjugated

Clonality: Polyclonal

Uniport ID: P22612

Host Species: Rabbit

Species Reactivity: Human

Immunogen: Fusion protein of human PRKACG

Immunogen Species: Human

Applications: ELISA, IHC

Tested Applications: ELISA, IHC;ELISA:1:2000-1:5000, IHC:1:25-1:100

Purification Method: Antigen affinity purification

Dilution Ratio1: ELISA:1:2000-1:5000

Dilution Ratio2: IHC:1:25-1:100

Dilution Ratio3:

Dilution Ratio4:

Dilution Ratio5:

Dilution Ratio6:

Buffer: -20°C, pH7.4 PBS, 0.05% NaN3, 40% Glycerol

Form: Liquid

Storage: Upon receipt, store at -20°C or -80°C. Avoid repeated freeze.

Initial Research Areas: Signal Transduction

Research Areas: Cancer;Metabolism;Signal transduction

View AllClose

0 Reviews

View AllClose