Histone H2B.11 (At5g59910), Recombinant Protein
Products
Online Inquiry

Histone H2B.11 (At5g59910), Recombinant Protein

Cat: RP09645
Size: 0.02 mg (E-Coli)/ 0.1 mg (E-Coli)/ 0.02 mg (Yeast)/ 0.1 mg (Yeast)/ 0.02 mg (Baculovirus)/ 0.02 mg (Mammalian-Cell)/ 1 mg (E-Coli)/ 0.1 mg (Baculovirus)/ 1 mg (Yeast)/ 0.1 mg (Mammalian-Cell)/ 1 mg (Baculovirus)/ 0.5 mg (Mammalian-Cell)
Species: Arabidopsis thaliana (Mouse-ear cress)
Datasheet:

Product Info

Full Product Name
Recombinant Arabidopsis thaliana Histone H2B.11 (At5g59910)
Product Gene Name
At5g59910 recombinant protein
Purity
Greater or equal to 85% purity as determined by SDS-PAGE. (lot specific)
Sequence
APKAEKKPAE KKPASEKPVE EKSKAEKAPA EKKPKAGKKL PKEAGAGGDK KKKMKKKSVE TYKIYIFKVL KQVHPDIGIS SKAMGIMNSF INDIFEKLAQ EASKLARYNK KPTITSREIQ TAVRLVLPGE LAKHAVSEGT KAVTKFTSS
Sequence Positions
2-150, Full length protein
Format
Lyophilized or liquid (Format to be determined during the manufacturing process)
Host
E Coli or Yeast or Baculovirus or Mammalian Cell
Molecular Weight
16,449 Da
Storage
Store at -20℃. For long-term storage, store at -20℃ or -80℃. Store working aliquots at 4℃ for up to one week. Repeated freezing and thawing is not recommended.

NCBI/Uniprot Data

NCBI Accession #
NP_200799.1
NCBI GI #
15238563
NCBI GenBank Nucleotide #
NM_125384.3
NCBI GeneID
836113
NCBI Official Full Name
Histone superfamily protein
NCBI Official Symbol
HTB4
NCBI Official Synonym Symbols
MMN10.15; MMN10_15
NCBI Protein Information
Histone superfamily protein
UniProt Gene Name
At5g59910
UniProt Protein Name
Histone H2B.11
UniProt Synonym Protein Names
HTB4
UniProt Primary Accession #
P40283
UniProt Secondary Accession #
Q5PP00; Q8LDE5; Q9FJE5
UniProt Related Accession #
P40283
UniProt Comments
Core component of nucleosome. Nucleosomes wrap and compact DNA into chromatin, limiting DNA accessibility to the cellular machineries which require DNA as a template. Histones thereby play a central role in transcription regulation, DNA repair, DNA replication and chromosomal stability. DNA accessibility is regulated via a complex set of post-translational modifications of histones, also called histone code, and nucleosome remodeling.

For research use only, not for clinical use.