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NSF peptide - 123-0P

NSF is a trimeric ATPase required for membrane fusion during vesicular transport
control peptide
Cat. No.: 123-0P
Amount: 100 µg
Price: $105.00
Cat. No. 123-0P 100 µg peptide, lyophilized. For reconstitution add 100 µl H2O to get a 1mg/ml solution in PBS. Then aliquot and store at -20°C to -80°C until use.
Control peptides should be stored at -20°C when still lyophilized!
Applications
 
Immunogen Synthetic peptide corresponding to AA 733 to 744 from rat NSF (UniProt Id: Q9QUL6)
Recommended dilution Optimal concentrations should be determined by the end-user.
Matching antibodies 123 002, 123 003, 123 004
Remarks

This control peptide consists of the synthetic peptide (REEGASPLDFD) that has been used for immunization. It has been tested in preadsorption experiments and blocks efficiently and specifically the corresponding signal in Western blots. The amount of peptide needed for efficient blocking depends on the titer and on the affinity of the antibody to the antigen.

Data sheet 123-0p.pdf
Cat. No.: 123-0P
Amount: 100 µg
Price: $105.00
Background

N-ethylamide sensitive fusion protein NSF functions together with SNAPs (soluble NSF attachment proteins) and SNAREs (SNAP receptors) in vesicular transport.
NSF is a homotrimer whose polypeptide subunits are made up of three distinct domains: an amino - terminal domain (N) and two homologous ATP-binding domains (D1 and D2). NSF is an ATPase that dissociates SNARE complexes, such as the core complex composed of synaptobrevin/VAMP, syntaxin 1 and SNAP 25 under ATP hydrolysis. The ability of the D1 domain to hydrolyze ATP is required for NSF activity. The D2 domain is required for trimerization, but its ability to hydrolyze ATP is not absolutely required for NSF function.

Protocols