Ubiquitin Carboxyl-Terminal Hydrolase Isozyme L3 (UCHL3) Antibody

Covalent attachment of the C-terminus of ubiquitin to cellular proteins plays a role in a variety of cellular processes. Ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolysis is catalyzed by deubiquitinating (DUB) enzymes and is necessary for several functions, including liberation of monomeric ubiquitin from the precursors encoded by ubiquitin genes and recycling of ubiquitin monomers. There are 2 distinct families of DUBs, ubiquitin-specific proteases (UBPs) and ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolases (UCHs). Mayer and Wilkinson (1989) identified 4 distinct UCH activities from bovine thymus. All 4 were thiol proteases and had high-affinity binding sites for ubiquitin. Wilkinson et al. (1989) purified the predominant isozyme, UCHL3, and raised antibodies against it. By screening a human B-cell expression library with the antibodies, the authors isolated cDNAs encoding human UCHL3. Sequence comparisons revealed that the sequence of the predicted 230-amino acid human UCHL3 protein is 54% identical to that of UCHL1.
Supplier Abbexa Ltd.
Product # abx031536-400UL
Pricing 400 µl USD $609.0
Clonality Polyclonal
Conjugation Unconjugated
Host Rabbit
Tested Applications ELISA, WB, IHC
UniProt Primary AC P15374
Dry Ice No
Availability Shipped within 5-10 working days.
Note This product is for research use only.
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