Cat. #157952
Anti-Xylan/arabinoxylan [LM11]
Cat. #: 157952
Unit size: 100 ug
Target: Wheat arabinoxylan in addition to unsubstituted xylans.
Class: Monoclonal
Host: Rat
£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: Paul Knox
Institute: University of Leeds
Tool Details
*FOR RESEARCH USE ONLY (for other uses, please contact the licensing team)
- Name: Anti-Xylan/arabinoxylan [LM11]
- Alternate name: Xylan, ?-1,4-linked xylose
- Research fields: Biochemistry
- Class: Monoclonal
- Conjugation: Unconjugated
- Host: Rat
- Description: Xylans are major noncellulosic polysaccharides of plant cell walls and are especially abundant in secondary cell walls. Xylans are chains of ÄÂ?-1,4-linked d-xylopyranosyl residues that can be substituted with arabinosyl, glucuronosyl (and its 4-O-methyl ether derivative), or acetyl residues (Ebringerov?? and Heinze 2000). Glucuronoxylans occur in angiosperm secondary cell walls, whereas Commelinoid monocotyledon primary cell walls have abundant glucuronoarabinoxylans (GAXs), and cereal grains have neutral arabinoxylans (Carpita 1996; Ebringerov?? and Heinze 2000). Structural features of xylans can vary during development (Obel et al. 2002; Suzuki et al. 2000). All xylans are thought to cross-link cellulose microfibrils and contribute to cell mechanical properties. Commercially, arabinoxylans are important for the functionality of flour and the nutritional value of animal feed.
- Immunogen: Xylopentaose-BSA
- Myeloma used: IR983F
- Recommended controls: IgM
Target Details
- Target: Wheat arabinoxylan in addition to unsubstituted xylans.
- Target background: Xylans are major noncellulosic polysaccharides of plant cell walls and are especially abundant in secondary cell walls. Xylans are chains of ÄÂ?-1,4-linked d-xylopyranosyl residues that can be substituted with arabinosyl, glucuronosyl (and its 4-O-methyl ether derivative), or acetyl residues (Ebringerov?? and Heinze 2000). Glucuronoxylans occur in angiosperm secondary cell walls, whereas Commelinoid monocotyledon primary cell walls have abundant glucuronoarabinoxylans (GAXs), and cereal grains have neutral arabinoxylans (Carpita 1996; Ebringerov?? and Heinze 2000). Structural features of xylans can vary during development (Obel et al. 2002; Suzuki et al. 2000). All xylans are thought to cross-link cellulose microfibrils and contribute to cell mechanical properties. Commercially, arabinoxylans are important for the functionality of flour and the nutritional value of animal feed.
Handling
- Format: Liquid
- Unit size: 100 ug
- Shipping conditions: Shipping at 4° C
References
- McCartney et al. 2005. J Histochem Cytochem. 53(4):543-6. PMID: 15805428.