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In vitro transcription of capped mRNA with modified nucleotides and Poly(A) tail
TSA (Tyramide Signal Amplification), used for signal amplification of ISH, IHC and IC etc.
Separation of phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated proteins without phospho-specific antibody
A convenient and sensitive way for cell proliferation assay and cytotoxicity assay
Protect the integrity of proteins from multiple proteases and phosphatases for different applications.
c-Myc Peptide is a useful displacement of c-Myc-tagged fusion proteins bound to anti-c-Myc antibodies in immunoassays. The successful inhibition of antibody binding by c-Myc peptide demonstrates binding is specific. c-Myc peptide participates in regulation of growth-related gene transcription.
The c-Myc Peptide is a synthetic peptide with an amino acid sequence that corresponds to the amino acids 410-419 of the C-terminal of human c-myc. Myc (c-Myc) is a regulator gene that codes for a transcription factor. c-Myc activation results in numerous biological effects. The first to be discovered was its capability to drive cell proliferation (upregulates cyclins, downregulates p21), but it also plays a very important role in regulating cell growth (upregulates ribosomal RNA and proteins), apoptosis (downregulates Bcl-2), differentiation and stem cell self-renewal. C-Myc is a very strong proto-oncogene and it is very often found to be upregulated in many types of cancers. c-Myc overexpression stimulates gene amplification, [1] presumably through DNA over-replication.
References: 1. Denis N, Kitzis A, Kruh J, Dautry F, Corcos D (August 1991). "Stimulation of methotrexate resistance and dihydrofolate reductase gene amplification by c-myc". Oncogene 6 (8): 1453–7.