Recombinant Human RANTES (CCL5) 0 BewertungenSubmit a Review Produktdetails Katalognummer: 300-06 Beschreibung: RANTES is a CC chemokine that can signal through the CCR1, CCR3, CCR5 and US28 (cytomegalovirus receptor) receptors. It is a chemoattractant towards monocytes, memory T cells (CD4+/CD45RO), basophils, and eosinophils. RANTES also has the capability to inhibit certain strains of HIV-1, HIV-2 and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV). Recombinant Human RANTES is a 7.8 kDa protein containing 68 amino acid residues, including the four highly conserved cysteine residues present in the CC chemokines. Source: E.coli Synonyms: Regulation upon Activation Normal T cell Express Sequence, CCL5, SIS-delta AA Sequence: SPYSSDTTPC CFAYIARPLP RAHIKEYFYT SGKCSNPAVV FVTRKNRQVC ANPEKKWVRE YINSLEMS Purity: ≥ 98% by SDS-PAGE gel and HPLC analyses. Biological Activity: Determined by its ability to chemoattract human blood monocytes using a concentration range of 1.0-10.0 ng/ml. Calculated Molecular Weight: 7.8 kDa Accession Number: P13501 Gene ID: 6352 Endotoxin: Endotoxin level is < 0.1 ng/ug of protein (< 1 EU/ug) crossreactivity: Bacteria, Cow, Hamster, Human, Human + Rat, Human + Virus, Leech, Monkey, Mouse, Pig, Rat References PubMed SDS Datenblattsuche Product Line Country Of Origin: USA Not for human use. Research Interest AIDS/HIV Angiogenesis/Cardiovascular Chemotaxis Immune System Inflammation Neurobiology Wound Healing Allergy Transplantation product.subtitle.recentcitations Erstautor Du, Y Titel Chemokines form nanoparticles with DNA and can superinduce TLR-driven immune inflammation. Literaturstelle The Journal of Experimental Medicine; 219(7) PubMed ID 35640018 Erstautor Gurusamy, M Titel G-protein-coupled receptor P2Y10 facilitates chemokine-induced CD4 T cell migration through autocrine/paracrine mediators. Literaturstelle Nature Communications; 12(1) pg6798 PubMed ID 34815397 Erstautor Ofir-Birin, Y Titel Malaria parasites both repress host CXCL10 and use it as a cue for growth acceleration Literaturstelle Nature Communications; 12(1) pg4851 PubMed ID 34381047