Zea mays Uncharacterized 33.9 kDa protein in mitochondrial linear 2.3 KB plasmid-Mammalian Cell

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Product description:

Price: 2371.00

Size: 100ug

Catalog no: GEN1217535.Mammalian Cell

Details:

Gene name

N/A

Tissue

mitochondrial

Expression system

Mammalian Cell

Form

Lyophilized protein

Product category

Recombinant Proteins

Purity

Greater than 90% (determined by SDS-PAGE)

Available also expressed in:

E Coli ; Yeast ; Baculovirus ; Mammalian Cell

Long name

Recombinant Zea mays Uncharacterized 33.9 kDa protein in mitochondrial linear 2.3 KB plasmid

Applications

This protein can be used as a positive control for applications such as ELISA, IFA, RIA, Western Blot, etc.

Alternative names

Uncharacterized 33.9 kDa protein in mitochondrial linear 2.3 KB plasmid (mitochondrion); Uncharacterized 33.9 kDa protein in mitochondrial linear 2.3 KB plasmid;

Storage

This protein can be stored at -20 degrees Celsius. For extended periods of time it is recommended to keep the protein frozen at -40 or -80 degrees Celsius. Avoid cycles of freezing and thawing as they might denaturate the polypeptide chains.

Description

For cells, cell lines and tissues in culture till half confluency.The kilo Daltons subunit weight of Uncharacterized 33.9 kDa protein in mitochondrial linear 2.3 KB plasmid compared to your protein ladder can be shifted a little due to electrophoresis effects. 1 kDa = 1000 g/mol protein

General description

Uncharacterized 33.9 kDa protein in mitochondrial linear 2.3 KB plasmid is a recombinant protein expressed in Mammalian Cell . The protein can be with or without a His-Tag or other tag in accordance to customer's request. All of our recombinant proteins are manufactured in strictly controlled facilities and by using a well established technology which guarantees full batch-to-bact consistency and experiment reproducibility.

Kit

Plasmid mini made and maxi DNA purification kits can be silica gel or anion exchange, endotoxin free and are used to produce pure plasmids that are small DNA molecules within a cell separated from chromosomal DNA and can replicate independently. They are most commonly found in bacteria as small circular, double-stranded DNA molecules; however, plasmids are sometimes present in archaea and eukaryotic organisms. In nature, plasmids often carry genes that may benefit the survival of the organism, for example antibiotic resistance. While the chromosomes are big and contain all the essential information for living, plasmids usually are very small and contain only additional information. Artificial plasmids are widely used as vectors in molecular cloning, serving to drive the replication of recombinant DNA sequences within host organisms.