RICTOR anticorps (AA 1-50)
Aperçu rapide pour RICTOR anticorps (AA 1-50) (ABIN7449930)
Antigène
Voir toutes RICTOR AnticorpsReactivité
Hôte
Clonalité
Conjugué
Application
-
-
Épitope
- AA 1-50
-
Fonction
- Rabbit anti-Rictor Antibody, Affinity Purified
-
Purification
- Affinity Purified
-
Immunogène
- between AA 1 and 50
-
Isotype
- IgG
-
-
-
-
Indications d'application
-
IP: 2 - 10 μg/mg lysate
WB: 1:2,000 - 1:10,000. Blots performed with ABIN7449930 show additional bands not seen with .
-
Restrictions
- For Research Use only
-
-
-
Concentration
- 1000 μg/mL
-
Buffer
- Tris-citrate/phosphate buffer, pH 7 to 8 containing 0.09 % Sodium Azide
-
Agent conservateur
- Sodium azide
-
Précaution d'utilisation
- This product contains Sodium azide: a POISONOUS AND HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE which should be handled by trained staff only.
-
Stock
- 4 °C
-
Date de péremption
- 12 months
-
-
- RICTOR (RPTOR Independent Companion of mTOR, Complex 2 (RICTOR))
-
Autre désignation
- Rictor
-
Sujet
- Background: Rictor is a subunit of mTORC2, which regulates cell growth and survival in response to hormonal signals. mTORC2 is activated by growth factors, but, in contrast to mTORC1, seems to be nutrient-insensitive. mTORC2 seems to function upstream of Rho GTPases to regulate the actin cytoskeleton, probably by activating one or more Rho-type guanine nucleotide exchange factors. mTORC2 promotes the serum-induced formation of stress-fibers or F-actin. mTORC2 plays a critical role in AKT1 'Ser-473' phosphorylation, which may facilitate the phosphorylation of the activation loop of AKT1 on 'Thr-308' by PDK1 which is a prerequisite for full activation. mTORC2 regulates the phosphorylation of SGK1 at 'Ser-422'. mTORC2 also modulates the phosphorylation of PRKCA on 'Ser-657'. Plays an essential role in embryonic growth and development [taken from the Universal Protein Resource (UniProt) Q6R327].
-
ID gène
- 253260
-
NCBI Accession
- NP_689969
-
UniProt
- Q6R327
-
Pathways
- Fc-epsilon Receptor Signaling Pathway, EGFR Signaling Pathway, Neurotrophin Signaling Pathway, Regulation of Actin Filament Polymerization, CXCR4-mediated Signaling Events
Antigène
-