HSF1 antibody (AA 425-439) (Atto 390)
Quick Overview for HSF1 antibody (AA 425-439) (Atto 390) (ABIN1741558)
Target
See all HSF1 AntibodiesReactivity
Host
Clonality
Conjugate
Application
Clone
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Binding Specificity
- AA 425-439
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Specificity
- Detects ~85 kDa (unstressed cell lysates) and ~95 kDa (heat shocked cell lysates).
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Cross-Reactivity
- Cow, Guinea Pig, Hamster, Human, Monkey, Mouse, Rabbit, Rat
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Purification
- Protein G Purified
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Immunogen
- Purified recombinant mouse HSF1 protein, epitope mapping to amino acids 425-439
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Isotype
- IgG1
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Application Notes
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- WB (1:1000)
- IHC (1:2000)
- ICC/IF (1:100)
- optimal dilutions for assays should be determined by the user.
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Comment
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1 μg/ml of ABIN1741558 was sufficient for detection of HSF1 in 20 μg of heat shocked HeLa cell lysate by colorimetric immunoblot analysis using Rabbit anti-rat IgG: AP as the secondary antibody.
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Restrictions
- For Research Use only
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Format
- Liquid
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Concentration
- 1 mg/mL
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Buffer
- PBS pH 7.4, 50 % glycerol, 0.1 % sodium azide, Storage buffer may change when conjugated
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Preservative
- Sodium azide
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Precaution of Use
- This product contains Sodium azide: a POISONOUS AND HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE which should be handled by trained staff only.
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Storage
- 4 °C
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Storage Comment
- Conjugated antibodies should be stored at 4°C
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- HSF1 (Heat Shock Factor Protein 1 (HSF1))
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Alternative Name
- HSF1
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Background
- HSF1, or heat shock factor 1, belongs to a family of Heat Shock transcription factors that activate the transcription of genes encoding products required for protein folding, processing, targeting, degradation, and function (2). The up-regulation of HSP (heat shock proteins) expression by stressors is achieved at the level of transcription through a heat shock element (HSE) and a transcription factor (HSF) (3, 4, 5). Most HSFs have highly conserved amino acid sequences. On all HSFs there is a DNA binding domain at the N-terminus. Hydrophobic repeats located adjacent to this binding domain are essential for the formation of active trimers. Towards the C-terminal region another short hydrophobic repeat exists, and is thought to be necessary for suppression of trimerization (6). There are two main heat shock factors, 1 and 2. Mouse HSF1 exists as two isoforms, however in higher eukaryotes HSF1 is found in a diffuse cytoplasmic and nuclear distribution in un-stressed cells. Once exposed to a multitude of stressors, it localizes to discrete nuclear granules within seconds. As it recovers from stress, HSF1 dissipates from these granules to a diffuse nuceloplasmic distribution. HSF2 on the other hand is similar to mouse HSF1, as it exists as two isoforms, the alpha form being more transcriptionally active than the smaller beta form (7, 8). Various experiments have suggested that HFS2 may have roles in differentiation and development (9, 10, 11).
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Gene ID
- 15499
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NCBI Accession
- NP_032322
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UniProt
- P38532
Target
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