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RBCL (Isoform 1), (Isoform 2) antibody

Reactivity: Arabidopsis thaliana, Baculogypsina sphaerulata WB, CM, IF, Lbl, TP Host: Rabbit Polyclonal unconjugated
Catalog No. ABIN93539
  • Target
    RBCL
    Binding Specificity
    • 8
    • 4
    • 1
    • 1
    Isoform 1, Isoform 2
    Reactivity
    • 5
    • 4
    • 4
    • 1
    • 1
    • 1
    • 1
    • 1
    Arabidopsis thaliana, Baculogypsina sphaerulata
    Host
    • 13
    • 1
    Rabbit
    Clonality
    • 14
    Polyclonal
    Conjugate
    • 5
    • 3
    • 3
    • 3
    Un-conjugated
    Application
    Western Blotting (WB), Confocal Microscopy (CM), Immunofluorescence (IF), Labeling (Lbl), Tissue Printing (TP)
    Specificity
    Antibody is a cellular [compartment marker] of plastid stroma or a cytopasmmarker in cyanobacteria. Antibody can detect Rubisco protein from 31.25 fmoles. Antibody will detect Rubisco Form I and Form II, therefore is suitable for workwith samples from Dinoflagellates, Haptophytes and Ochrophytes (diatoms,Raphidophytes, brown algae) as well as higher plants. This antibody can be usedto quantify Rubisco protein in plant and algal samples.
    Characteristics
    Expected / apparent Molecular Weight of the Antigene: 52.7 kDa (Arabidopsis thaliana), 52.5 kDa (cyanobacteria), 52.3 (Chlamydomonas reinhardtii)
    Purification
    serum
    Immunogen
    KLH-conjugated synthetic peptide conserved across all known plant, algal and (cyano)bacterial RbcL protein sequences (form I L8S8 and form II L2), including Arabidopsis thaliana AtCg00490, Hordeum vulgare P05698, Oryza sativa P0C510, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii P00877, Synechococcus PCC 7920 A5CKC5
  • Application Notes
    Recommended Dilution: 1 : 5000 - 10 000 with standard ECL (WB), 1 : 800 (TP),immunofluorescence,confocal microscopy (IF), 1 : 250 for images see Prins et al.(2008), detailed protocol available on request (IL).
    Comment

    This antibody was used in:Immunocytochemical staining of diatoms according to Schmid (2003) J Phycol 39: 139-153 and Wordemann et al. (1986) J Cell Biol 102: 1688-1698.Immunofluorescence Dreier et al. (2012). FEMS Microbial Ecol., March 2012.Western blot and tissue printing during a student course Ma et al. (2009).

    Restrictions
    For Research Use only
  • Format
    Lyophilized
    Reconstitution
    For reconstitution add 10 µL of sterile water
    Buffer
    PBS pH 7.4
    Handling Advice
    Please, remember to spin tubes briefly prior to opening them to avoid any losses that might occur from lyophilized material adhering to the cap or sides of the tubes.
    Once reconstituted make aliquots to avoid repreated freeze-thaw cycles.
    Storage
    -20 °C
  • Seveso, Montano, Strona, Orlandi, Galli, Vai: "The susceptibility of corals to thermal stress by analyzing Hsp60 expression." in: Marine environmental research, Vol. 99C, pp. 69-75, (2014) (PubMed).

    Scotti, Sannino, Idoine, Hamman, De Stradis, Giorio, Maréchal-Drouard, Bock, Cardi: "The HIV-1 Pr55(gag) polyprotein binds to plastidial membranes and leads to severe impairment of chloroplast biogenesis and seedling lethality in transplastomic tobacco plants." in: Transgenic research, (2014) (PubMed).

    Kolesinski, Belusiak, Czarnocki-Cieciura, Szczepaniak: "Rubisco Accumulation Factor 1 from Thermosynechococcus elongatus participates in the final stages of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase assembly in Escherichia coli cells and in vitro." in: The FEBS journal, Vol. 281, Issue 17, pp. 3920-32, (2014) (PubMed).

    Niewiadomska, Bilger, Gruca, Mulisch, Miszalski, Krupinska: "CAM-related changes in chloroplastic metabolism of Mesembryanthemum crystallinum L." in: Planta, Vol. 233, Issue 2, pp. 275-85, (2011) (PubMed).

    Balsemão-Pires, Jaillais, Olson, Andrade, Umen, Chory, Sachetto-Martins: "The Arabidopsis translocator protein (AtTSPO) is regulated at multiple levels in response to salt stress and perturbations in tetrapyrrole metabolism." in: BMC plant biology, Vol. 11, pp. 108, (2011) (PubMed).

    Keech, Pesquet, Gutierrez, Ahad, Bellini, Smith, Gardeström: "Leaf senescence is accompanied by an early disruption of the microtubule network in Arabidopsis." in: Plant physiology, Vol. 154, Issue 4, pp. 1710-20, (2010) (PubMed).

    Masuda, Mizusawa, Narisawa, Tozawa, Ohta, Takamiya: "The bacterial stringent response, conserved in chloroplasts, controls plant fertilization." in: Plant & cell physiology, Vol. 49, Issue 2, pp. 135-41, (2008) (PubMed).

    Prins, van Heerden, Olmos, Kunert, Foyer: "Cysteine proteinases regulate chloroplast protein content and composition in tobacco leaves: a model for dynamic interactions with ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) vesicular bodies." in: Journal of experimental botany, Vol. 59, Issue 7, pp. 1935-50, (2008) (PubMed).

    Wordeman, McDonald, Cande: "The distribution of cytoplasmic microtubules throughout the cell cycle of the centric diatom Stephanopyxis turris: their role in nuclear migration and positioning the mitotic spindle during cytokinesis." in: The Journal of cell biology, Vol. 102, Issue 5, pp. 1688-98, (1986) (PubMed).

  • Target
    RBCL
    Background
    AGI Code: ATCG00490
    This antibody is especially suitable for quantifying of Rubisco in plant and algal samples. Rubisco (Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase) catalyzes the rate-limiting step of CO2 fixation in photosynthetic organisms. It is demonstrably homologous from purple bacteria to flowering plants and consists of two protein subunits, each present in 8 copies. In plants and green algae, the large subunit (~55 kDa) is coded by the chloroplast rbcL gene, and the small subunit (15 kDa) is coded by a family of nuclear rbcS genes.
    Molecular Weight
    52.7 kDa (Arabidopsis thaliana), 52.5 kDa (cyanobacteria), 52.3 (Chlamydomonas reinhardtii)
    UniProt
    P00877, P05698, O03042, P0C510
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