Cat. #151045
Anti-Hairy [3/30]
Cat. #: 151045
Sub-type: Primary antibody
Unit size: 100 ug
Target: Hairy (Drosophila)
Class: Monoclonal
Application: WB
Reactivity: Drosophila
Host: Mouse
£300.00
This fee is applicable only for non-profit organisations. If you are a for-profit organisation or a researcher working on commercially-sponsored academic research, you will need to contact our licensing team for a commercial use license.
Contributor
Inventor: Julian Gannon
Institute: Cancer Research UK, London Research Institute: Clare Hall Laboratories
Tool Details
*FOR RESEARCH USE ONLY (for other uses, please contact the licensing team)
- Name: Anti-Hairy [3/30]
- Alternate name: CD11 antigen-like family member C, Leu M5, Leukocyte adhesion glycoprotein p15,95 alpha chain, Leukocyte adhesion receptor p15,95, CD antigen: CD11c
- Research fields: Cell signaling and signal transduction;Developmental biology;Genetics;Stem cell biology
- Clone: 0.1
- Tool sub type: Primary antibody
- Class: Monoclonal
- Conjugation: Unconjugated
- Molecular weight: 150 kDa
- Strain: Balb/c
- Reactivity: Drosophila
- Host: Mouse
- Application: WB
- Description: The Drosophila Hairy protein is a repressor of transcription that regulates embryonic segmentation. These antibodies stain Drosophila embryos.
- Immunogen: Hairy gene product
- Immunogen uniprot id: P20702
- Isotype: Not Known
- Myeloma used: Sp2/0-Ag14
- Recommended controls: Peripheral blood monocytes (PBMCs) (FACS), Uterine tissue sections (IHC)
Target Details
- Target: Hairy (Drosophila)
- Molecular weight: 150 kDa
- Target background: The Drosophila Hairy protein is a repressor of transcription that regulates embryonic segmentation. These antibodies stain Drosophila embryos.
Applications
- Application: WB
Handling
- Format: Liquid
- Concentration: 0.9-1.1 mg/ml
- Unit size: 100 ug
- Storage buffer: PBS with 0.02% azide
- Storage conditions: -15° C to -25° C
- Shipping conditions: Shipping at 4° C
References
- Wainwright et al. 1992. Mol Cell Biol. 12(6):2475-83. PMID: 1588951.
- Point mutations in the Drosophila hairy gene demonstrate in vivo requirements for basic, helix-loop-helix, and WRPW domains.