| Overview |
| bs-14125R-Cy7 |
| CXX1 Polyclonal Antibody, Cy7 Conjugated |
| IF(IHC-P), IF(IHC-F), IF(ICC) |
| Human |
| Specifications |
| Cy7 |
| Rabbit |
| KLH conjugated synthetic peptide derived from human Cerebral protein 5/CXX1 |
| Polyclonal |
| #REF! |
| IgG |
| 1ug/ul |
| Purified by Protein A. |
| Aqueous buffered solution containing 0.01M TBS (pH 7.4) with 1% BSA, 0.02% Proclin300 and 50% Glycerol. |
| Store at -20C. Aliquot into multiple vials to avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles. |
| Target |
| 8933 |
| A6ZKI3 |
| Cytoplasm, Cell membrane |
| Cerebral protein 5; CAAX box protein 1; CXX 1; FAM127A; Family with sequence similarity 127, member A; Mammalian retrotransposon derived protein 8C; Mar8; MAR8C; Mart8; MART8C; CXX1_HUMAN. |
| The X and Y chromosomes are the human sex chromosomes. Chromosome X consists of about 153 million base pairs and nearly 1,000 genes. The combination of an X and Y chromosome lead to normal male development while two copies of X lead to normal female development. There are a number of conditions related to an unsual number and combination of sex chromosomes being inherited. More than one copy of the X chromosome with a Y chromosome causes Klinefelter's syndrome. A single copy of X alone leads to Turner's syndrome. More than 2 copies of the X chromosome, in the absence of a Y chromosome, is known as Triple X syndrome. Color blindness, hemophilia, and Duchenne muscular dystrophy are well known X chromosome-linked conditions which affect males more frequently as males carry a single X chromosome. The CXX1 gene product has been provisionally designated CXX1 pending further characterization. |
| Application Dilution |
| IF(IHC-P) |
1:50-200 |
| IF(IHC-F) |
1:50-200 |
| IF(ICC) |
1:50-200 |