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MilliporeSigma

A7470

Anti-c-Myc Agarose Affinity Gel antibody produced in rabbit

affinity isolated antibody

Synonym(s):

Anti-c-Myc

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1 ML

$789.00

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About This Item

NACRES:
NA.56
UNSPSC Code:
12352203

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Product Name

Anti-c-Myc Agarose Affinity Gel antibody produced in rabbit, affinity isolated antibody

biological source

rabbit

conjugate

agarose conjugate

antibody form

affinity isolated antibody

antibody product type

primary antibodies

clone

polyclonal

species reactivity

human

analyte chemical class(es)

proteins (c-Myc)

technique(s)

affinity chromatography: suitable
immunoprecipitation (IP): suitable

capacity

≥10 nmol/mL binding capacity (c-Myc tagged fusion protein)
≥7 nmol/mL elution capacity (c-Myc tagged fusion protein)

UniProt accession no.

storage temp.

2-8°C

Quality Level

Gene Information

human ... MYC(4609)

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This Item
C3956SAB2108476AV38156
biological source

rabbit

biological source

rabbit

biological source

rabbit

biological source

rabbit

antibody form

affinity isolated antibody

antibody form

affinity isolated antibody

antibody form

affinity isolated antibody

antibody form

IgG fraction of antiserum

species reactivity

human

species reactivity

human

species reactivity

guinea pig, mouse, rabbit, human, rat

species reactivity

rat, human, pig, rabbit

conjugate

agarose conjugate

conjugate

unconjugated

conjugate

unconjugated

conjugate

unconjugated

clone

polyclonal

clone

polyclonal

clone

polyclonal

clone

polyclonal

UniProt accession no.

P01106

UniProt accession no.

P01106

UniProt accession no.

P01106

UniProt accession no.

P01106

Application

Anti-c-Myc Agarose Affinity Gel antibody produced in rabbit has been used in:
  • chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)[1]
  • co-immunoprecipitation[2]
  • western blotting[3]
  • immunofluorescence[3]
  • immunoprecipitation[4]

Biochem/physiol Actions

Anti-c-Myc recognizes an epitope located on c-Myc tagged fusion proteins.
c-Myc proto-oncogene increased expression is observed in a variety of human tumors.[5] Amplification of Myc gene locus is observed in angiosarcomas[6] and translocation is implicated in Burkitt′s lymphoma.[5] c-Myc is a master regulator and targets a wide variety of metabolic events.[5] An epitope located within amino acid residues 410-419 (EQKLISEEDL) of human c-Myc[7] has been widely used as a tag in many expression vectors, enabling the expression of proteins as c-Myc tagged fusion proteins.[8] Anti-c-Myc agarose is useful in the purification of expressed c-Myc tagged fusion proteins in bacterial lysates or transfected cells.

Disclaimer

Unless otherwise stated in our catalog, our products are intended for research use only and are not to be used for any other purpose, which includes but is not limited to, unauthorized commercial uses, in vitro diagnostic uses, ex vivo or in vivo therapeutic uses or any type of consumption or application to humans or animals.

General description

The human c-Myc proto-oncogene belongs to MYC oncogene family[9] and is the human cellular homolog of the avian v-Myc gene found in several leukemogenic retroviruses. c-Myc gene is localized on human chromosome 8q24.21.[6] The two major domains of include the N-terminal box regions and the C-terminal basic-region with helix-loop-helix/leucine-zipper motif.[9]

Immunogen

synthetic peptide of the human p62c-Myc protein.

Physical form

Suspension of beaded agarose (1:1 v/v) in 0.01 M phosphate buffered saline containing 15 mM sodium azide.

Preparation Note

For continuous use and extended storage, store at 2 °C to 8 °C. Do not freeze.

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Storage Class

11 - Combustible Solids

wgk

WGK 1

flash_point_f

Not applicable

flash_point_c

Not applicable


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Sachiko Takikawa et al.
Epigenetics, 8(12), 1268-1279 (2013-10-19)
Genomic imprinting is a common epigenetic phenomenon in mammals. Dysregulation of genomic imprinting has been implicated in a variety of human diseases. ZFP57 is a master regulator in genomic imprinting. Loss of ZFP57 causes loss of DNA methylation imprint at
Ritsuko Nakamura et al.
The Journal of biological chemistry, 287(5), 3282-3291 (2011-12-14)
Nel (neural epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like molecule) is a multimeric, multimodular extracellular glycoprotein with heparin-binding activity and structural similarities to thrombospondin-1. Nel is predominantly expressed in the nervous system and has been implicated in neuronal proliferation and differentiation, retinal axon
Riko Hatakeyama et al.
Molecular and cellular biology, 30(24), 5598-5607 (2010-10-20)
Endocytosis of nutrient transporters is stimulated under various conditions, such as elevated nutrient availability. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, endocytosis is triggered by ubiquitination of transporters catalyzed by the E3 ubiquitin ligase Rsp5. However, how the ubiquitination is accelerated under certain conditions
Robert C Alver et al.
Nucleic acids research, 42(13), 8389-8404 (2014-06-29)
Accurate replication of the genome requires the evolutionarily conserved minichromosome maintenance protein, Mcm10. Although the details of the precise role of Mcm10 in DNA replication are still debated, it interacts with the Mcm2-7 core helicase, the lagging strand polymerase, DNA
Hiroyuki Takai et al.
Cell, 131(7), 1248-1259 (2007-12-28)
We report an unexpected role for Tel2 in the expression of all mammalian phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-related protein kinases (PIKKs). Although Tel2 was identified as a budding yeast gene required for the telomere length maintenance, we found no obvious telomeric function for

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