Mouse Neuronal Pentraxin 1 receptor (NPXR1) Control/blocking peptide #1

General information
 

Name:
Mouse Neuronal Pentraxin 1 receptor (NPXR1) Control/blocking peptide #1
Size:
100 ug
Catalog no:
NPXR11-P
Price:
160 EUR
 

Additional extra details
 

  • Stock availability

    Available

    Category

    Antibody Blocking Peptide

    Antibody type

    N/A

  • Antibody host

    N/A

    Antibody conjugate

    N/A

    Technical datasheet

    Contact Gentaur to request the datasheet or ask our specialists for more information.

  • Notes

    The Mouse Neuronal Pentraxin 1 receptor (NPXR1) Control/blocking peptide #1 is manufactured for Research Use Only or for diagnostics purposes.

    Tissue

    control

    Test

    You can block the antibody by the specific target amino acid sequence of peptide.Mouse or mice from the Mus musculus species are used for production of mouse monoclonal antibodies or mabs and as research model for humans in your lab. Mouse are mature after 40 days for females and 55 days for males. The female mice are pregnant only 20 days and can give birth to 10 litters of 6-8 mice a year. Transgenic, knock-out, congenic and inbread strains are known for C57BL/6, A/J, BALB/c, SCID while the CD-1 is outbred as strain.

  • Properties

    blocking peptide

    Description

    Isotype or positive controls by peptides, antibodies and deactivated samples.Peptides short amino acid chains or epitopes or blocking antagonists. The shortest peptides are dipeptides, consisting of 2 amino acids joined by a single peptide bond, followed by tripeptides, tetra peptides, ... till polypeptides that are long, continuous, and unbranched synthetic peptide chains. These biological oligomers and polymers can be Solid-phase peptide synthesis (SPPS), or in continue produced for custom peptide synthesis projects. The High-efficiency solid phase peptide synthesis (HE-SPPS) is give very low production costs.The receptors are ligand binding factors of type 1, 2 or 3 and protein-molecules that receive chemical-signals from outside a cell. When such chemical-signals couple or bind to a receptor, they cause some form of cellular/tissue-response, e.g. a change in the electrical-activity of a cell. In this sense, am olfactory receptor is a protein-molecule that recognizes and responds to endogenous-chemical signals, chemokinesor cytokines e.g. an acetylcholine-receptor recognizes and responds to its endogenous-ligand, acetylcholine. However, sometimes in pharmacology, the term is also used to include other proteins that are drug-targets, such as enzymes, transporters and ion-channels.

    Latin name

    Mus musculus