Calpain 1, Large Subunit (CAPN1) Recombinant Protein | CAPN1 recombinant protein
Recombinant Calpain 1, Large Subunit (CAPN1)
MGHHHHHHSGSEF-YPAT FWVNPQFKIR LEEVDDADDY DSRESGCSFL LALMQKHRRR ERRFGRDMET IGFAVYQVPR ELAGQPVHLK RDFFLANASR AQSEHFINLR EVSNRIRLPP GEYIVVPSTF EPNKEGDFLL RFFSEKKAGT QELDDQIQAN LPDEKVLSEE EIDDNFKTLF SKLAGDDMEI SVKELQTILN RIISKHKDLR TNGFSLESCR SMVNLMDRDG NGKLGLVEFN ILWNRIRNYL TIFRKFDLDK SGSMSAYEMR MAIEAAGFKL NKKLHELIIT RYSEPDLAVD FDNFVCCLVR LETMFRFFKI LDTD
Stability Test: The thermal stability is described by the loss rate of the targetprotein. The loss rate was determined by accelerated thermal degradation test,that is, incubate the protein at 37 degree C for 48h, and no obvious degradation andprecipitation were observed. (Referring from China Biological Products Standard,which was calculated by the Arrhenius equation.) The loss of this protein is lessthan 5% within the expiration date under appropriate storage condition.
NCBI and Uniprot Product Information
NCBI Description
calcium-dependent protease that may be involved in experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE) [RGD, Feb 2006]
Uniprot Description
CAPN1: Calcium-regulated non-lysosomal thiol-protease which catalyze limited proteolysis of substrates involved in cytoskeletal remodeling and signal transduction. Forms a heterodimer with a small (regulatory) subunit (CAPNS1). Ubiquitous. Activated by micromolar concentrations of calcium and inhibited by calpastatin. Belongs to the peptidase C2 family.
Protein type: Protease; Motility/polarity/chemotaxis; EC 3.4.22.52
Cellular Component: focal adhesion; mitochondrion; membrane; lysosome; cytoplasm; plasma membrane; cytosol
Molecular Function: protein binding; cytoskeletal protein binding; calcium-dependent cysteine-type endopeptidase activity; calcium ion binding
Biological Process: mammary gland involution; protein autoprocessing; receptor catabolic process; proteolysis