At least three isoforms of Neucrin are known to exist, this antibody will detect the two shorter isoforms. Neucrin antibody is predicted to not cross-react with RILP.
Purification
Affinity chromatography purified via peptide column
Immunogen
17 amino acid peptide near the carboxy terminus of human Neucrin.
DRAXIN
Reactivity: Human
WB, IF (p), IF (cc)
Host: Rabbit
Polyclonal
Cy7
Restrictions
For Research Use only
Format
Liquid
Buffer
PBS containing 0.02 % sodium azide.
Preservative
Sodium azide
Precaution of Use
WARNING: Reagents contain sodium azide. Sodium azide is very toxic if ingested or inhaled. Avoid contact with skin, eyes, or clothing. Wear eye or face protection when handling. If skin or eye contact occurs, wash with copious amounts of water. If ingested or inhaled, contact a physician immediately. Sodium azide yields toxic hydrazoic acid under acidic conditions. Dilute azide-containing compounds in running water before discarding to avoid accumulation of potentially explosive deposits in lead or copper plumbing.
Handling Advice
Avoid freezing and thawing repeatly.
Storage
4 °C/-20 °C
Storage Comment
Store at 4 °C for short term use.Store at -20 °C for long term preservation.
Target
DRAXIN
(Dorsal Inhibitory Axon Guidance Protein (DRAXIN))
Neucrin, also known as Draxin, is a repulsive guidance protein for the spinal cord and forebrain commissures.It is thought to act as an antagonist of canonical Wnt signaling by inhibiting the stabilization of cytosolic beta-catenin.Ectopically expressed neucrin inhibited growth or caused misrouting of chick spinal cord commissural axons in vivo while Neucrin-null mice showed defasciculation of spinal cord commissural axons and an absence of all forebrain commisures.Other experiments in mice have shown that olfactory bulb axonal outgrowth is inhibited by Neucrin, suggesting that Neucrin functions as an inhibitory guidance cue for olfactory bulb axons. Synonyms: Draxin, dorsal repulsive axon guidance protein