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Antibody Explorer
Antibodies to Epitope Tags
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Recombinant DNA technology enables the insertion of specific foreign sequences to genes of interest. When these sequences encode short peptides they create an antigenic determinant (epitope) that can be recognized by antibodies. Thus, when the DNA sequence of interest is fused with the DNA sequence of the short peptide and introduced into cells, the resulting expressed protein is now a "tagged protein." Since antibodies to the peptide tag are commercially available, there is no need to generate specific antibodies to identify, immunoprecipitate or immunoaffinity purify the protein. Moreover, in most cases the stable fusion protein has the same bioactivity and biodistribution as the native protein.
Many different epitope tags have been engineered into recombinant proteins. These include FLAG™, HA, HIS, c-Myc, VSV-G, V5 and HSV.
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| Tag |
Sequence |
| HIS |
HHHHHH |
| c-MYC |
EQKLISEEDL |
| HA |
YPYDVPDYA |
| VSV-G |
YTDIEMNRLGK |
| HSV |
QPELAPEDPED |
| V5 |
GKPIPNPLLGLDST |
| FLAG |
DYKDDDDK |
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