

| Catalog No. | MC015012 |
|---|---|
| Description |
Recombinant Mouse EFNA2 Protein, N-His (MC015012) expressed in E. coli. Purity: >90% as determined by SDS-PAGE..
Highlights
|
| Expression system | E. coli |
| Accession | P52801 |
| Protein length | Asp31-Arg167 |
| Applications | ELISA, Immunogen, SDS-PAGE, WB, Bioactivity testing in progress |
| Species | Mus musculus (Mouse) |
| Nature | Recombinant |
| Endotoxin level | Please contact with the lab for this information. |
| Purity | >90% as determined by SDS-PAGE. |
| Form | Lyophilized |
| Storage buffer | Lyophilized from a solution in PBS pH 7.4, 1 mM EDTA, 4% Trehalose, 1% Mannitol. Please refer to the specific buffer information in the hardcopy of datasheet or the lot-specific COA. |
| Reconstitution | Reconstitute in sterile water for a stock solution. A copy of datasheet will be provided with the products, please refer to it for details. |
| Shipping | In general, proteins are provided as lyophilized powder/frozen liquid. They are shipped out with dry ice/blue ice unless customers require otherwise. |
| Stability and Storage | Use a manual defrost freezer and avoid repeated freeze thaw cycles. Store at 2 to 8°C for frequent use. Store at -20 to -80°C for twelve months from the date of receipt. |
| Alternate Names | CEK7-L, CEK7-ligand, ELF-1, EPH-related receptor tyrosine kinase ligand 6, Efna2, Elf1, Ephrin-A2, Epl6, Eplg6, LERK-6, Lerk6 |
| Background | Ephrin-A2 is a ~23 kDa protein. Cell surface GPI-bound ligand for Eph receptors, a family of receptor tyrosine kinases which are crucial for migration, repulsion and adhesion during neuronal, vascular and epithelial development. Binds promiscuously Eph receptors residing on adjacent cells, leading to contact-dependent bidirectional signaling into neighboring cells. The signaling pathway downstream of the receptor is referred to as forward signaling while the signaling pathway downstream of the ephrin ligand is referred to as reverse signaling. With the EPHA2 receptor may play a role in bone remodeling through regulation of osteoclastogenesis and osteoblastogenesis. |
| Note | For research use only |
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