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alpha Tubulin antibody (Biotin)

The Rat Monoclonal anti-alpha Tubulin antibody has been validated for WB, ELISA, IHC (p), ICC, IHC (fro) and ICFC. It is suitable to detect alpha Tubulin in samples from Human, Mouse, Rat, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Mammalian and Avian.
Catalog No. ABIN7595379

Quick Overview for alpha Tubulin antibody (Biotin) (ABIN7595379)

Target

See all alpha Tubulin (TUBA1) Antibodies
alpha Tubulin (TUBA1)

Reactivity

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  • 22
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Human, Mouse, Rat, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Mammalian, Avian

Host

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  • 2
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  • 1
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Rat

Clonality

  • 69
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Monoclonal

Conjugate

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This alpha Tubulin antibody is conjugated to Biotin

Application

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Western Blotting (WB), ELISA, Immunohistochemistry (Paraffin-embedded Sections) (IHC (p)), Immunocytochemistry (ICC), Immunohistochemistry (Frozen Sections) (IHC (fro)), Intracellular Flow Cytometry (ICFC)

Clone

YOL1-34
  • Purpose

    Anti-alpha-Tubulin Biotin

    Specificity

    The rat monoclonal antibody YOL1/34 recognizes an epitope of alpha-tubulin localized between amino acids 414-422. It has higher affinity for fixed microtubules than for native ones.

    Purification

    Purified antibody is conjugated with biotin LC-NHS ester under optimum conditions and unconjugated antibody and free biotin are removed by size-exclusion chromatography.

    Immunogen

    Yeast tubulin

    Isotype

    IgG2a
  • Application Notes

    Immunocytochemistry: Recommended dilution 2-8 μg/mL.

    Restrictions

    For Research Use only
  • Concentration

    1 mg/mL

    Buffer

    Phosphate buffered saline (PBS), pH 7.4, 15 mM sodium azide

    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

    4 °C

    Storage Comment

    Store at 2-8°C. Do not freeze.
  • Target

    alpha Tubulin (TUBA1)

    Alternative Name

    alpha-Tubulin

    Background

    The microtubules are intracellular dynamic polymers made up of evolutionarily conserved polymorphic alpha/beta-tubulin heterodimers and a large number of microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs). The microtubules consist of 13 protofilaments and have an outer diameter 25 nm. Microtubules have their intrinsic polarity, highly dynamic plus ends and less dynamic minus ends. Microtubules are required for vital processes in eukaryotic cells including mitosis, meiosis, maintenance of cell shape and intracellular transport. Microtubules are also necessary for movement of cells by means of flagella and cilia. In mammalian tissue culture cells microtubules have their minus ends anchored in microtubule organizing centers (MTOCs). The GTP (guanosintriphosphate) molecule is an essential for tubulin heterodimer to associate with other heterodimers to form microtubule. In vivo, microtubule dynamics vary considerably. Microtubule polymerization is reversible and a populations of microtubules in cells are on their minus ends either growing or shortening –, this phenomenon is called dynamic instability of microtubules. On a practical level, microtubules can easily be stabilized by the addition of non-hydrolysable analogues of GTP (eg. GMPPCP) or more commonly by anti-cancer drugs such as Taxol. Taxol stabilizes microtubules at room temperature for many hours. Using limited proteolysis by enzymes both tubulin subunits can be divided into N-terminal and C-terminal structural domains. The alpha-tubulin (relative molecular weight around 50 kDa) is globular protein that exists in cells as part of soluble alpha/beta-tubulin dimer or it is polymerized into microtubules. In different species it is coded by multiple tubulin genes that form tubulin classes (in human 6 genes). Expressed tubulin genes are named tubulin isotypes. Some of the tubulin isotypes are expressed ubiquitously, while some have more restricted tissue expression. Alpha-tubulin is also subject of numerous post-translational modifications. Tubulin isotypes and their posttranslational modifications are responsible for multiple tubulin charge variants - tubulin isoforms. Heterogeneity of alpha-tubulin is concentrated in C-terminal structural domain.

    Gene ID

    7277

    UniProt

    Q71U36

    Pathways

    Microtubule Dynamics
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