Western Blot: 1/500 - 1/1000. Immunohistochemistry: 1/50 - 1/200. Other applications not tested. Optimal dilutions are dependent on conditions and should be determined by the user.
Restrictions
For Research Use only
Concentration
1,0 mg/mL
Buffer
Phosphate buffered saline (PBS) with 15 mM sodium azide, approx. pH 7.2.
Preservative
Sodium azide
Precaution of Use
This product contains sodium azide: a POISONOUS AND HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE which should be handled by trained staff only.
Handling Advice
Avoid repeated freezing and thawing.
Storage
4 °C/-20 °C
Storage Comment
Store the antibody undiluted at 2-8 °C for one month or (in aliquots) at -20 °C for longer.
The transport of proteins across the nuclear envelope is a selective, multi-step process involving several cytoplasmic factors. Proteins must be recognized as import substrates, dock at the nuclear pore complex and translocate across the nuclear envelope in an ATP-dependent fashion. Several cytosolic and nuclear proteins that are central to this process have been identified. For example, two cytosolic factors critically involved in the recognition and docking process are the karyopherin alpha and karyopherin beta proteins. The karyopherin holoenzyme is a heterodimer of alpha and beta subunits. The nuclear protein B23 (also referred to as nucleophosmin) is involved in ribosomal assembly and rRNA transport. B23 is an abundant protein that is highly phosphorylated by Cdc2 kinase during mitosis.Synonyms: NPM, NPM1, Nucleolar Phosphoprotein B23, Nucleolar Protein NO38, Numatrin