JMJD2A Tudor Domains (888-1023 aa) (GST-tagged), Human recombinant

Catalog number
7678-50
Name
JMJD2A Tudor Domains (888-1023 aa) (GST-tagged), Human recombinant
Size
50 μg
Price
414.00 EUR
Supplier

Details

Target
JMJD2A
Background
Tudor domains are small protein structural motifs of about ~50 amino acids related to the “royal family” of methyl readers, which also includes chromo, MBT, PWWP, and Agenet-like domains. Tudor domains occur either alone, in tandem, or with other domains and are found in many proteins that are involved in RNA metabolism, germ cell development, transposon silencing, DNA damage response, histone modification, and chromatin remodeling. The tudor domains recognize symmetric methylated arginine or methylated lysine residues. JMJD2A catalyzes the demethylation of trimethylated histone H3 at lysine residues 9 and 36 (H3K9me3 and H3K36me3). However, the tudor domain of this protein has been shown to bind histone H3K4me, H3K9me3, and H3K20me2/3. Like other JmjC protein hydroxylase family members, JMJD2A is an α-ketoglutarate-dependent Fe (II) oxygenase. This product contains the tandem tudor domains of JMJD2A.
Concentration
N/A
Molecular weight
42.2 kDa (888-1023 aa, NT GST Tag)
Synonym
JMJD2A Tudor Domains (888-1023 aa) (GST-tagged), Human recombinant
Other name
JHDM3A; Jumonji Domain Containing 2A; KDM4A
NCBI gene number
9682
NCBI gene
KDM4A
Gene source
Human
NCBI number
O75164
Recombinant
Yes
Source
E. coli
Purification
≥90%
Tested applications
SDS-PAGE, HPLC
Level of endotoxin
N/A
Tested activity
N/A
Biological activity
N/A
Reesults
N/A
Binding ability
N/A
Unit
N/A
Storage condition
-80°C
Shipping under
dry ice
Physical appearance
Liquid
Physical properties
50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 150 mM sodium chloride, and 20% glycerol.
How to reconstitute
N/A
Aa sequence
N/A
Before use
Centrifuge the vial prior to opening.
Notes
For Research Use Only! Not to be used in humans
Properties
Human proteins, cDNA and human recombinants are used in human reactive ELISA kits and to produce anti-human mono and polyclonal antibodies. Modern humans (Homo sapiens, primarily ssp. Homo sapiens sapiens). Depending on the epitopes used human ELISA kits can be cross reactive to many other species. Mainly analyzed are human serum, plasma, urine, saliva, human cell culture supernatants and biological samples.
Additional source
Recombinants or rec. proteins
Group
recombinants