TSG101 (NM_006292) Human 3' UTR Clone

CAT#: SC203096

3`UTR clone of tumor susceptibility gene 101 (TSG101) for miRNA target validation


Reconstitution Protocol

USD 560.00

4 Weeks*

Size
    • 10 ug

Product Images

Other products for "TSG101"

Specifications

Product Data
Vector pMirTarget
Species Human
Transfection Reporter RFP
Assay Reporter Luciferase
E. coli Selection Kanamycin (25 ug/mL)
Mammalian Cell Selection Neomycin
Symbol TSG101
Synonyms TSG10; VPS23
ACCN NM_006292
Insert Size 236
Sequence Data
>SC203096 3'UTR clone of NM_006292
The sequence shown below is from the reference sequence of NM_006292. The complete sequence of this clone may contain minor differences, such as SNPs. Red=Cloning site Blue=Stop Codon


CAATTGGCAGAGCTCAGAATTCAAGCGATCGC

GGTCTCAGTGACCTCTACTGACTTCTCTGATACCAGCTGGAGGTTGAGCTCTTCTTAAAGTATTCTTCTC
TTCCTTTTATCAGTAGGTGCCCAGAATAAGTTATTGCAGTTTATCATTCAAGTGTAAAATATTTTGAATC
AATAATATATTTTCTGTTTTCTTTTGGTAAAGACTGGCTTTTATTAATGCACTTTCTATCCTCTGTAAAC
TTTTTGTGCTGAATGTTGGGACTGCT

ACGCGTAAGCGGCCGCGGCATCTAGATTCGAAGAAAATGACCG
Restriction Sites SgfI-MluI     
OTI Disclaimer Our molecular clone sequence data has been matched to the sequence identifier above as a point of reference. Note that the complete sequence of this clone is largely the same as the reference sequence but may contain minor differences , e.g., single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs).
Reference Data
RefSeq NM_006292.2
Summary The protein encoded by this gene belongs to a group of apparently inactive homologs of ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes. The gene product contains a coiled-coil domain that interacts with stathmin, a cytosolic phosphoprotein implicated in tumorigenesis. The protein may play a role in cell growth and differentiation and act as a negative growth regulator. In vitro steady-state expression of this tumor susceptibility gene appears to be important for maintenance of genomic stability and cell cycle regulation. Mutations and alternative splicing in this gene occur in high frequency in breast cancer and suggest that defects occur during breast cancer tumorigenesis and/or progression. [provided by RefSeq, Jul 2008]
Locus ID 7251

Documents

{0} Product Review(s)

0 Product Review(s) Submit review

Be the first one to submit a review

Product Citations

*Delivery time may vary from web posted schedule. Occasional delays may occur due to unforeseen complexities in the preparation of your product. International customers may expect an additional 1-2 weeks in shipping.