| Species : |
Human |
| Source : |
HeLa |
| Tag : |
Non |
| Description : |
cAMP is a signaling molecule important for a variety of cellular functions. cAMP exerts its effects by activating the cAMP-dependent protein kinase, which transduces the signal through phosphorylation of different target proteins. The inactive kinase holoenzyme is a tetramer composed of two regulatory and two catalytic subunits. cAMP causes the dissociation of the inactive holoenzyme into a dimer of regulatory subunits bound to four cAMP and two free monomeric catalytic subunits. Four different regulatory subunits and three catalytic subunits have been identified in humans. The protein encoded by this gene is one of the regulatory subunits. This subunit can be phosphorylated by the activated catalytic subunit. It may interact with various A-kinase anchoring proteins and determine the subcellular localization of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. This subunit has been shown to regulate protein transport from endosomes to the Golgi apparatus and further to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). |
| Form : |
Cell-Tissue Lysis buffer |
| Molecular Mass : |
46 kDa |
| Notes : |
Instruction of use: This knockdown cell lysate should be paired with wild-type HeLa cell lysate for use. For Western blotting, we recommend running wild-type and knockdown lysates on the same gel, and loading each well with equal volume and equal amount of total proteins. |
| Storage : |
Store at -20 centigrade for two years. |
| Concentration : |
Lot-specific |
| Shipping : |
Blue Ice |
| Components : |
1 vial of 100 μg WT HeLa cell lysate
1 vial of 100 μg PRKAR2A KD HeLa cell lysate |
| Protein Families : |
Druggable Genome |
| Protein Pathways : |
Apoptosis, Insulin signaling pathway |
| Lysate QC : |
RT-qPCR; Western Blotting (WB) |