Comparison

Cholera Toxin

Item no. 20-511-241839
Manufacturer GENWAY
Amount 0.2mg
Category
Type Antibody
Applications WB, ELISA
Clone B040M
Specific against other
ECLASS 10.1 32160702
ECLASS 11.0 32160702
UNSPSC 12352203
Alias GWB-B160CD
Similar products 20-511-241839
Available
Genway ID:
GWB-B160CD
Isotype:
IgG2a
Clone:
B040MHost Animal: Mouse. Hybridization of Sp2/0 myeloma
Type of Product:
Monoclonal Antibodies to Infectious Agents and Toxins
Concentration:
Lot specific Preservatives: NaN3
Buffer:
PBS pH 7. 4Applications Notes : Suitable for use in ELISA and Western blot. Each laboratory should determine an optimum working titer for use in its particular application. Other applications have not been tested but use in such assays should not necessarily be excluded
Warning:
This product contains sodium azide which has been classified as Xn (Harmful) in European Directive 67/548/EEC in the concentration range of 0. 1â ??1. 0%. When disposing of this reagent through lead or copper plumbing flush with copious volumes of water to prevent azide build-up in drains. MAb to Cholera Toxin. Monoclonal Antibody to Cholera Toxin beta subunit
Function:
The A1 chain catalyzes the ADP-ribosylation of Gs alpha a GTP-binding regulatory protein to activate the adenylate cyclase. This leads to an overproduction of cAMP and eventually to a hypersecretion of chloride and bicarbonate followed by water resulting in the characteristic cholera stool. The A2 chain tethers A1 to the pentameric ring.
Catalytic Activity:
NAD+ + peptide diphthamide = nicotinamide + peptide N-(ADP-D-ribosyl)diphthamide.
Subunit:
The holotoxin (choleragen) consists of a pentameric ring of B subunits whose central pore is occupied by the A subunit. The A subunit contains two chains A1 and A2 linked by a disulfide bridge.
Domain:
The four C-terminal residues of the A2 chain occupy the central pore of the holotoxin. Deletion of these residues weakens the interaction between the A subunit and the B pentamer without impairing the pentamer formation.
Miscellaneous:
After binding to gangliosides GM1 in lipid rafts through the subunit B pentamer the holotoxin and the gangliosides are internalized. The holotoxin remains bound to GM1 until arrival in the ER. The A subunit has previously been cleaved in the intestinal lumen but the A1 and A2 chains have remained associated. In the ER the A subunit disulfide bridge is reduced the A1 chain is unfolded by the PDI and disassembled from the rest of the toxin. Then the membrane-associated ER oxidase ERO1 oxidizes PDI which releases the unfolded A1 chain. The next step is the retrotranslocation of A1 into the cytosol. This might be mediated by the protein-conducting pore SEC61. Upon arrival in the cytosol A1 refolds and avoids proteasome degradation. In one way or another A1 finally reaches its target and induces toxicity.

Note: The presented information and documents (Manual, Product Datasheet, Safety Datasheet and Certificate of Analysis) correspond to our latest update and should serve for orientational purpose only. We do not guarantee the topicality. We would kindly ask you to make a request for specific requirements, if necessary.

All products are intended for research use only (RUO). Not for human, veterinary or therapeutic use.

Amount: 0.2mg
Available: In stock
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