Rabbit CXCR4 Polyclonal Antibody | anti-CXCR4 antibody
Rabbit Polyclonal CXCR4 antibody FITC; CXCR4 Antibody FITC-Congjugated
Immunocytochemistry: 1:250
Immunofluorescence: 1:250
Immunohistochemistry: 1:250
Immunoprecipitation: 1:250
Western Blot: 1:500
NCBI and Uniprot Product Information
NCBI Description
This gene encodes a CXC chemokine receptor specific for stromal cell-derived factor-1. The protein has 7 transmembrane regions and is located on the cell surface. It acts with the CD4 protein to support HIV entry into cells and is also highly expressed in breast cancer cells. Mutations in this gene have been associated with WHIM (warts, hypogammaglobulinemia, infections, and myelokathexis) syndrome. Alternate transcriptional splice variants, encoding different isoforms, have been characterized. [provided by RefSeq, Jul 2008]
Uniprot Description
CXCR4: Receptor for the C-X-C chemokine CXCL12/SDF-1 that transduces a signal by increasing intracellular calcium ion levels and enhancing MAPK1/MAPK3 activation. Acts as a receptor for extracellular ubiquitin; leading to enhanced intracellular calcium ions and reduced cellular cAMP levels. Involved in hematopoiesis and in cardiac ventricular septum formation. Also plays an essential role in vascularization of the gastrointestinal tract, probably by regulating vascular branching and/or remodeling processes in endothelial cells. Involved in cerebellar development. In the CNS, could mediate hippocampal-neuron survival. Acts as a coreceptor (CD4 being the primary receptor) for HIV-1 X4 isolates and as a primary receptor for some HIV-2 isolates. Promotes Env-mediated fusion of the virus. Monomer. Can form dimers. Interacts with CD164. Interacts with HIV-1 surface protein gp120 and Tat. Interacts with ARRB2; the interaction is dependent on the C-terminal phosphorylation of CXCR4 and allows activation of MAPK1 and MAPK3. Interacts with ARRC; the interaction is dependent on the C-terminal phosphorylation of CXCR4 and modulates calcium mobilization. Interacts (via the cytoplasmic C-terminal) with ITCH (via the WW domains I and II); the interaction, enhanced by CXCL12, ubiquitinates CXCR4 and leads to its degradation. Interacts with extracellular ubiquitin. Interacts with human cytomegalovirus/HHV- 5 protein UL78. Expressed in numerous tissues, such as peripheral blood leukocytes, spleen, thymus, spinal cord, heart, placenta, lung, liver, skeletal muscle, kidney, pancreas, cerebellum, cerebral cortex and medulla (in microglia as well as in astrocytes), brain microvascular, coronary artery and umbilical cord endothelial cells. Isoform 1 is predominant in all tissues tested. Belongs to the G-protein coupled receptor 1 family. 2 isoforms of the human protein are produced by alternative splicing.
Protein type: Membrane protein, multi-pass; Receptor, GPCR; Membrane protein, integral; GPCR, family 1
Chromosomal Location of Human Ortholog: 2q21
Cellular Component: cell junction; cell surface; cytoplasm; cytoplasmic membrane-bound vesicle; cytoplasmic vesicle; early endosome; integral to membrane; late endosome; leading edge; lysosome; plasma membrane
Molecular Function: actin binding; C-X-C chemokine receptor activity; coreceptor activity; cytokine binding; drug binding; G-protein coupled receptor activity; myosin light chain binding; protein binding; ubiquitin binding; ubiquitin protein ligase binding; viral receptor activity
Biological Process: activation of MAPK activity; apoptosis; calcium-mediated signaling; cardiac muscle contraction; dendritic cell chemotaxis; elevation of cytosolic calcium ion concentration; entry into host cell; epithelial cell development; G-protein coupled receptor protein signaling pathway; inflammatory response; myelin maintenance; neuron migration; neuron recognition; positive regulation of oligodendrocyte differentiation; regulation of calcium ion transport; regulation of cell migration; regulation of chemotaxis; regulation of programmed cell death; response to hypoxia; response to virus; telencephalon cell migration; viral envelope fusion with host membrane
Disease: Whim Syndrome