Catalog No. | BS2078 |
---|---|
Product Name | DGK-δ (S66) polyclonal antibody |
Applications | WB IHC IF |
Alternative Name | Diacylglycerol kinase delta; DAG kinase delta; 130 kDa diacylglycerol kinase; Diglyceride kinase delta; DGK-delta; DGKD; KIAA0145; DGKδ; DGK δ |
Swiss-Prot | Q16760 |
Host | Rabbit |
Reactivity | Human,Mouse,Rat |
Application_all | WB: 1:500~1:1000 IHC: 1:50~1:200 IF: 1:50~1:200 |
Product | Rabbit IgG, 1mg/ml in PBS with 0.02% sodium azide, 50% glycerol, pH7.2 |
Purification&Purity | The antibody was affinity-purified from rabbit antiserum by affinity-chromatography using epitope-specific immunogen and the purity is > 95% (by SDS-PAGE). |
Storage&Stability | Store at 4°C short term. Aliquot and store at -20°C long term. Avoid freeze-thaw cycles. |
Specificity | DGK-δ (S66) polyclonal antibody detects endogenous levels of DGK-δ protein. |
BiowMW | ~ 135 kDa |
Note | For research use only, not for use in diagnostic procedure. |
Immunogen | Synthetic peptide, corresponding to amino acids 34-88 of Human DGK-δ. |
Background
Diacylglycerol kinases (DGKs) phosphorylate diacylglycerol (DAG) to produce phosphatidic acid. DAG and phosphatidic acid are lipids that act as second messengers in signaling cascades. DGK-α influences cell activation and secretion of lethal exosomes, which in turn control cell death. DGK-β is abundant in restricted brain regions such as the caudate putamen and olfactory tubercle. DGK-γ encodes full-length and truncated transcripts that are present in a range of human tissues, with greatest expression observed in retina. DGK-δ is most abundant in skeletal muscle. DGK-ε shows specificity for arachidonylcontaining diacylglycerol and is expressed predominantly in testis. DGK-θ is most abundant in the cerebellum and hippocampus. DGK-ι is present in brain and retina as a predominant transcript of more than 12 kb, including a long 3-prime untranslated region, with additional low abundance transcripts of 9.5 and 7.5 kb. DGK-η is closely related to DGK-δ. DGK-ζ is most abundant in brain and muscle. DGKs have structural motifs that play regulatory roles, and these motifs form the basis for dividing the DGKs into five subtypes.