NOG rabbit monoclonal antibody
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Specification
Product Description
Rabbit monoclonal antibody raised against a human NOG peptide using ARM Technology.
Immunogen
A synthetic peptide of human NOG is used for rabbit immunization.
Customer or Abnova will decide on the preferred peptide sequence.Host
Rabbit
Library Construction
Non-fusion antibody library from rabbit spleen (ARM Technology).
Expression
Overexpression vector and transfection into 293H cell line.
Reactivity
Human
Purification
Protein A
Isotype
IgG
Quality Control Testing
Antibody reactive against human NOG peptide by ELISA and mammalian transfected lysate by Western Blot.
Storage Buffer
In 1x PBS, pH 7.4
Storage Instruction
Store at -20°C or lower. Aliquot to avoid repeated freezing and thawing.
Deliverable
Up to three rabbit IgG clones of 100 ug each will be delivered to customer.
Note
1. Customer may provide cell or tissue lysate for antibody screening.
2. Rabbit monoclonal antibody generated by ARM technology is amenable to antibody engineering including F(ab)2, IgG, scFv and different Fc and non-Fc conjugates per customer request. -
Applications
Western Blot (Transfected lysate)
ELISA
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Gene Info — NOG
Entrez GeneID
9241GeneBank Accession#
NOGGene Name
NOG
Gene Alias
SYM1, SYNS1
Gene Description
noggin
Gene Ontology
HyperlinkGene Summary
The secreted polypeptide, encoded by this gene, binds and inactivates members of the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) superfamily signaling proteins, such as bone morphogenetic protein-4 (BMP4). By diffusing through extracellular matrices more efficiently than members of the TGF-beta superfamily, this protein may have a principal role in creating morphogenic gradients. The protein appears to have pleiotropic effect, both early in development as well as in later stages. It was originally isolated from Xenopus based on its ability to restore normal dorsal-ventral body axis in embryos that had been artificially ventralized by UV treatment. The results of the mouse knockout of the ortholog suggest that it is involved in numerous developmental processes, such as neural tube fusion and joint formation. Recently, several dominant human NOG mutations in unrelated families with proximal symphalangism (SYM1) and multiple synostoses syndrome (SYNS1) were identified; both SYM1 and SYNS1 have multiple joint fusion as their principal feature, and map to the same region (17q22) as this gene. All of these mutations altered evolutionarily conserved amino acid residues. The amino acid sequence of this human gene is highly homologous to that of Xenopus, rat and mouse. [provided by RefSeq
Other Designations
symphalangism 1 (proximal)
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Interactome
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