Ki67-FC recombinant protein
- Catalog No.:YD3020
- Reactivity:Human;
- Purity:
- >90% as determined by SDS-PAGE
- Protein Name:
- Proliferation marker protein Ki-67 (Antigen identified by monoclonal antibody Ki-67) (Antigen KI-67) (Antigen Ki67)
- Sequence:
- Amino acid:1731-1842,with FC tag.
- Formulation:
- Phosphate-buffered solution
- Storage Stability:
- -15°C to -25°C/1 year(Avoid freeze / thaw cycles)
- Other Name:
- Proliferation marker protein Ki-67 ;Antigen identified by monoclonal antibody Ki-67;Antigen KI-67;Antigen Ki67;MKI67;
- Function:
- Required to maintain individual mitotic chromosomes dispersed in the cytoplasm following nuclear envelope disassembly (PubMed:27362226). Associates with the surface of the mitotic chromosome, the perichromosomal layer, and covers a substantial fraction of the chromosome surface (PubMed:27362226). Prevents chromosomes from collapsing into a single chromatin mass by forming a steric and electrostatic charge barrier: the protein has a high net electrical charge and acts as a surfactant, dispersing chromosomes and enabling independent chromosome motility (PubMed:27362226). Binds DNA, with a preference for supercoiled DNA and AT-rich DNA (PubMed:10878551). Does not contribute to the internal structure of mitotic chromosomes (By similarity). May play a role in chromatin organization (PubMed:24867636). It is however unclear whether it plays a direct role in chromatin organization or whether it
- Subcellular Location:
- Chromosome . Nucleus . Nucleus, nucleolus . Note=Associates with the surface of the mitotic chromosome, the perichromosomal layer, and covers a substantial fraction of the mitotic chromosome surface (PubMed:27362226). Associates with satellite DNA in G1 phase (PubMed:9510506). Binds tightly to chromatin in interphase, chromatin-binding decreases in mitosis when it associates with the surface of the condensed chromosomes (PubMed:15896774, PubMed:22002106). Predominantly localized in the G1 phase in the perinucleolar region, in the later phases it is also detected throughout the nuclear interior, being predominantly localized in the nuclear matrix (PubMed:22002106). .