PIPA5113360

TTYH1 Polyclonal Antibody, Invitrogen™

Manufacturer: Thermo Scientific

Select a Size

Pack Size SKU Availability Price
Each of 1 PIPA5113360-Each-of-1 In Stock ₹ 43,476.50

PIPA5113360 - Each of 1

₹ 43,476.50

In Stock

Quantity

1

Base Price: ₹ 43,476.50

GST (18%): ₹ 7,825.77

Total Price: ₹ 51,302.27

Antigen

TTYH1

Classification

Polyclonal

Conjugate

Unconjugated

Gene

TTYH1

Gene Alias

4930459B04Rik; 6330408P11Rik; hTTY1; mTTY1; Protein tweety homolog 1; tty; TTY1; TTYH1; tweety family member 1; tweety homolog 1; tweety homolog 1 (Drosophila)

Host Species

Rabbit

Purification Method

Protein G

Regulatory Status

RUO

Gene ID (Entrez)

57348

Content And Storage

-20°C or -80°C if preferred

Form

Liquid

Applications

ELISA, Immunocytochemistry, Western Blot

Concentration

2 mg/mL

Formulation

PBS with 50% glycerol and 0.03% ProClin 300; pH 7.4

Gene Accession No.

Q9H313

Gene Symbols

TTYH1

Immunogen

Recombinant Human Protein tweety homolog 1 protein (50-178AA)

Quantity

100 μg

Primary or Secondary

Primary

Target Species

Human

Product Type

Antibody

Isotype

IgG

Related Products

Img

Thermo Scientific

FEPA5144113

--

Img

Thermo Scientific

FEPA5144110

--

Img

Novus Biologicals

NB515255

--

Img

Novus Biologicals

NB515257

--

Img

Thermo Scientific

FEPA5144107

--

Img

Novus Biologicals

NB202417

--

Img

Thermo Scientific

PA550846

--

Img

Thermo Scientific

PIMA526024

--

Description

  • TTYH1 is a member of the tweety family of proteins, a family of chloride anion channels containing five transmembrane regions
  • TTYH1 is a Ca2+-independent, volume-sensitive large conductance chloride (Cl-) channel
  • TTYH1 is primarily expressed in neural tissue and upregulated in astrocytoma, glioma, and several other cancers
  • Recent experiments have shown that TTYH1 is an integral endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane protein involved in cell proliferation and is thought to play an essential role in embryonic cell growth, possibly through the Ca2+ storage/release process in ER membranes during early development.