CD3 delta / epsilon Heterodimer protein (His tag)
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- Target
- CD3 delta / epsilon Heterodimer
- Protein Type
- Recombinant
- Origin
- Human
- Source
- HEK-293 Cells
- Purification tag / Conjugate
- His tag
- Application
- Antibody Production (AbP), Standard (STD)
- Characteristics
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- Recombinant human Purified recombinant protein of CD3-epsilon/delta heterodimers, with C-terminal His tag, secretory expressed in 293E cells, 20 μg (C-term His tag) protein expressed in 293E cells.
- Produced with end-sequenced ORF clone
- Purification
- Purified
- Purity
- > 80 % as determined by SDS-PAGE and Coomassie blue staining
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- Application Notes
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Recombinant human proteins can be used for:
Native antigens for optimized antibody production
Positive controls in ELISA and other antibody assays - Comment
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The tag is located at the C-terminal.
- Restrictions
- For Research Use only
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- Concentration
- 50 μg/mL
- Buffer
- 1 x PBS, pH 7.4, 10 % glycerol.
- Storage
- -80 °C
- Storage Comment
- Store at -80°C. Thaw on ice, aliquot to individual single-use tubes, and then re-freeze immediately. Only 2-3 freeze thaw cycles are recommended.
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- Target
- CD3 delta / epsilon Heterodimer
- Alternative Name
- CD3-epsilon/delta heterodimers
- Background
- The protein encoded by this gene is the CD3-epsilon polypeptide, which together with CD3-gamma, -delta and -zeta, and the T-cell receptor alpha/beta and gamma/delta heterodimers, forms the T-cell receptor-CD3 complex. This complex plays an important role in coupling antigen recognition to several intracellular signal-transduction pathways. The genes encoding the epsilon, gamma and delta polypeptides are located in the same cluster on chromosome 11. The epsilon polypeptide plays an essential role in T-cell development. Defects in this gene cause immunodeficiency. This gene has also been linked to a susceptibility to type I diabetes in women.
- Molecular Weight
- 22.7 kDa
- NCBI Accession
- NP_000724
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