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HSP70 antibody

This Rat Monoclonal antibody specifically detects HSP70 in WB, ELISA, IF and ICC. It exhibits reactivity toward Drosophila melanogasterand has been mentioned in 1 publication.
Catalog No. ABIN2485875

Quick Overview for HSP70 antibody (ABIN2485875)

Target

See all HSP70 Antibodies
HSP70 (Heat Shock Protein 70 (HSP70))

Reactivity

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Drosophila melanogaster

Host

  • 193
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Rat

Clonality

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Monoclonal

Conjugate

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This HSP70 antibody is un-conjugated

Application

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Western Blotting (WB), ELISA, Immunofluorescence (IF), Immunocytochemistry (ICC)

Clone

7FB
  • Specificity

    Detects ~70 kDa (heat-inducible form).

    Cross-Reactivity

    Drosophila melanogaster

    Purification

    Protein G Purified

    Immunogen

    Prepared from Drosophila tissue culture cells heat shocked at 36.5C for 3 hours, and isolated using SDS PAGE.

    Isotype

    IgG2b
  • Application Notes

    • WB (1:2000)
    • optimal dilutions for assays should be determined by the user.

    Comment

    1 μg/ml of ABIN2485875 was sufficient for detection of Drosophila HSP70 using an indirect assay with rabbit anti-rat IgG and goat anti-rabbit IgG:HRP.

    Restrictions

    For Research Use only
  • Format

    Liquid

    Concentration

    1 mg/mL

    Buffer

    PBS pH 7.4, 50 % glycerol, 0.1 % sodium azide, Storage buffer may change when conjugated

    Preservative

    Sodium azide

    Precaution of Use

    This product contains Sodium azide: a POISONOUS AND HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE which should be handled by trained staff only.

    Storage

    -20 °C

    Storage Comment

    -20°C
  • Merkling, Overheul, van Mierlo, Arends, Gilissen, van Rij: "The heat shock response restricts virus infection in Drosophila." in: Scientific reports, Vol. 5, pp. 12758, (2015) (PubMed).

  • Target

    HSP70 (Heat Shock Protein 70 (HSP70))

    Alternative Name

    HSP70

    Background

    HSP70 genes encode abundant heat-inducible 70- kDa HSPs (HSP70s). In most eukaryotes HSP70 genes exist as part of a multigene family. They are found in most cellular compartments of eukaryotes including nuclei, mitochondria, chloroplasts, the endoplasmic reticulum and the cytosol, as well as in bacteria. The genes show a high degree of conservation, having at least 50 % identity (2). The N-terminal two thirds of HSP70s are more conserved than the C-terminal third. HSP70 binds ATP with high affinity and possesses a weak ATPase activity which can be stimulated by binding to unfolded proteins and synthetic peptides (3). When HSC70 (constitutively expressed) present in mammalian cells was truncated, ATP binding activity was found to reside in an N-terminal fragment of 44 kDa which lacked peptide binding capacity. Polypeptide binding ability therefore resided within the C-terminal half (4). The structure of this ATP binding domain displays multiple features of nucleotide binding proteins (5). All HSP70s, regardless of location, bind proteins, particularly unfolded ones. The molecular chaperones of the HSP70 family recognize and bind to nascent polypeptide chains as well as partially folded intermediates of proteins preventing their aggregation and misfolding. The binding of ATP triggers a critical conformational change leading to the release of the bound substrate protein (6). The universal ability of HSP70s to undergo cycles of binding to and release from hydrophobic stretches of partially unfolded proteins determines their role in a great variety of vital intracellular functions such as protein synthesis, protein folding and oligomerization and protein transport. For more information visit our HSP70 Scientific Resource Guide at http://www.HSP70.com.

    Gene ID

    48582

    NCBI Accession

    NP_524927

    UniProt

    Q9BIS2
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