N-glycosylation of proteins is initiated in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) by the transfer of the preassembled oligosaccharide glucose-3-mannose-9-N-acetylglucosamine-2 from dolichyl pyrophosphate to acceptor sites on the target protein by an oligosaccharyltransferase complex. This core oligosaccharide is sequentially processed by several ER glycosidases and by an endomannosidase (E.C. 3.2.1.130), such as MANEA, in the Golgi. MANEA catalyzes the release of mono-, di-, and triglucosylmannose oligosaccharides by cleaving the alpha-1,2-mannosidic bond that links them to high-mannose glycans (Hamilton et al., 2005 [PubMed 15677381]).[supplied by OMIM, Sep 2008].
custom-made
MANEA
Origin: Mouse
Host: HEK-293 Cells
Recombinant
> 90 % as determined by Bis-Tris PAGE, anti-tag ELISA, Western Blot and analytical SEC (HPLC)
custom-made
MANEA
Origin: Human
Host: HEK-293 Cells
Recombinant
> 90 % as determined by Bis-Tris PAGE, anti-tag ELISA, Western Blot and analytical SEC (HPLC)
custom-made
MANEA
Origin: Mouse
Host: Cell-free protein synthesis (CFPS)
Recombinant
approximately 70-80 % as determined by SDS PAGE, Western Blot and analytical SEC (HPLC).
ELISA, WB, SDS
custom-made
MANEA
Origin: Human
Host: Cell-free protein synthesis (CFPS)
Recombinant
approximately 70-80 % as determined by SDS PAGE, Western Blot and analytical SEC (HPLC).
ELISA, WB, SDS