This gene encodes coagulation factor VII which is a vitamin K-dependent factor essential for hemostasis. This factor circulates in the blood in a zymogen form, and is converted to an active form by either factor IXa, factor Xa, factor XIIa, or thrombin by minor proteolysis. Upon activation of the factor VII, a heavy chain containing a catalytic domain and a light chain containing 2 EGF-like domains are generated, and two chains are held together by a disulfide bond. In the presence of factor III and calcium ions, the activated factor then further activates the coagulation cascade by converting factor IX to factor IXa and/or factor X to factor Xa. Defects in this gene can cause coagulopathy. Alternative splicing results in multiple transcript variants encoding different isoforms that may undergo similar proteolytic processing to generate mature polypeptides.

Pack Size

100ul, 1ml, 20ul

Applications

ELISA, WB

Host Species

Rabbit

Ig Isotype

IgG

Antibody Type

Polyclonal Antibody

Organism Species

Human

Product Synonyms

F7

Observed Mol Wt

52kDa

Alternative Names

SPCA; F7

Immunogen (Antigen)

Recombinant protein

Format

Liquid

Buffer Formulation

50% glycerol, PBS with 0.01% thimerosal, pH7.3

Reactivity

Human, Mouse, Rat

Uniprot ID

2155

Gene ID

P08709

Purification

Antigen-specific affinity chromatography followed by Protein A affinity chromatography

Usage

For Research Use Only. Not for diagnostics or human use.

Shelf Life

12 months at time of shipping

Shipping

Shipped in Dry Ice at -20 Degree Celsius

Storage

Store at -20 Degree Celsius. It is recommended to aliquot and store to avoid repeated freeze-thaw as it affects the stability of the antibody.

Research Areas

Cell Biology, Developmental Biology, Immunology

KD/KO Validated

KD Validated

Disclaimer

The data indicated herein are as indicated and validated in our laboratory. These reagents are for research use only and not for in-vitro diagnostics or human use.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “F7 Rabbit Polyclonal Antibody”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *