Recombinant Human PDILT Protein (His Tag) | PKSH032959

(No reviews yet) Write a Review
SKU:
575-PKSH032959
€676.00
Frequently bought together:

Description

Recombinant Human PDILT Protein (His Tag) | PKSH032959 | Gentaur US, UK & Europe Disrtribition

Synonyms: Protein Disulfide-Isomerase-Like Protein of the Testis; PDILT

Active Protein: N/A

Activity: Recombinant Human Protein Disulfide-Isomerase-Like Protein of the Testis is produced by our Mammalian expression system and the target gene encoding Ser21-Leu584 is expressed with a 6His tag at the C-terminus.

Protein Construction: Recombinant Human Protein Disulfide-Isomerase-Like Protein of the Testis is produced by our Mammalian expression system and the target gene encoding Ser21-Leu584 is expressed with a 6His tag at the C-terminus.

Fusion Tag: C-6His

Species: Human

Expressed Host: Human Cells

Shipping: This product is provided as liquid. It is shipped at frozen temperature with blue ice/gel packs. Upon receipt, store it immediately at<-20°C.

Purity: > 90 % as determined by reducing SDS-PAGE.

Endotoxin: < 1.0 EU per µg as determined by the LAL method.

Stability and Storage: Store at < -20°C, stable for 6 months. Please minimize freeze-thaw cycles.

Molecular Mass: 65.5 kDa

Formulation: Supplied as a 0.2 μm filtered solution of 20mM TrisHCl, 150mM NaCl, 10% Glycerol, pH 8.0.

Reconstitution: Not Applicable

Background: Protein Disulfide-Isomerase-Like Protein of the Testis (PDILT) is a protein that belongs to the protein disulfide isomerase family. Human PDILT is synthesized as a 584 amino acid precursor that contains an 20 amino acid signal sequence and a 564 amino acid mature chain. PDILT contains 1 thioredoxin domain lacks the conserved redox-active Cys at position 417 which is replaced by a Ser residue, suggesting that it lacks thioredoxin activity. PDILT is an enzyme in the endoplasmic reticulum in eukaryotes. It is not a disulfide-linked homodimer. The PDILT protein can interacts with ERO1L and CLGN. PDILT probable redox-inactive chaperone involved in spermatogenesis.

Research Area: Signal Transduction, Developmental Biology,

View AllClose