Specifications
SHIPPING NOTES
Blue Ice or 4ºC. All orders received in North America by 12:00 PM PST Monday to Thursday will usually be shipped out on the same day. North American customers will typically receive their orders within 1-2 business days. All shipments are F.O.B. from point of shipment, pre-paid and added to the invoice. Freight charges include but not limited to: priority service and packaging materials.Products are shipped with “cold packs” in insulated containers. There is a charge for this packaging and for the shipping costs via FedEx. Please inspect packages immediately upon receipt and inform Labscoop Customer Support of any shortage or damage within 48 hours of receipt. We can only accept returns after we have given prior authorization and issued specific shipping instructions. If a customer wishes to use their own FedEx account number please indicate this on the purchase order or during checkout.
APPLICATION
WB, IHC, IP, ELISA
GENE ID
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/3329
*USAGE / SAFETY STATEMENT
Not for use in humans. Not for use in diagnostics or therapeutics. For in vitro research use only.
ANTIBODY TYPE
WB (1:1000), ICC/IF (1:100); optimal dilutions for assays should be determined by the user.
REACTIVITY SPECIES
Human | Mouse | Rat | Bovine | Dog | Chicken | Rabbit | Hamster
CONJUGATION/TAG
Unconjugated
PURIFICATION
Protein A Purified
QUALITY CERTIFICATION / COMPLIANCE
ISO 9001:2015
IMMUNOGEN
Human HSP60 produced through recombinant DNA methods in E.coli
SPECIFICITY
Detects ~60kDa.
STORAGE BUFFER
PBS, 50% glycerol, 0.09% sodium azide *Storage buffer may change when conjugated
ANTIBODY ID
https://antibodyregistry.org/search.php?q=AB_10807230
CELLUAR LOCALIZATIONS
Mitochondrion | Mitochondrion Matrix
SCIENTIFIC BACKGROUND
In both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells, the misfolding and aggregation of proteins during biogenesis and under conditions of cellular stress are prevented by molecular chaperones. Members of the HSP60 family of heat shock proteins are some of the best characterized chaperones. HSP60, also known as Cpn60 or GroEl, is an abundant protein synthesized constitutively in the cell that is induced to a higher concentration after brief cell shock. It is present in many species and exhibits a remarkable sequence homology among various counterparts in bacteria, plants, and mammals with more than half of the residues identical between bacterial and mammalian HSP60 (1-3). Whereas mammalian HSP60 is localized within the mitochondria, plant HSP60, or otherwise known as Rubisco-binding protein, is located in plant chloroplasts. It has been indicated that these proteins carry out a very important biological function due to the fact that HSP60 is present in so many different species. The common characteristics of the HSP60s from the divergent species are i) high abundance, ii) induction with environmental stress such as heat shock, iii) homo-oligomeric structures of either 7 or 14 subunits which reversibly dissociate in the presence of Mg2+ and ATP, iv) ATPase activity and v) a role in folding and assembly of oligomeric protein structures (4). These similarities are supported by recent studies where the single-ring human mitochondrial homolog, HSP60 with its co-chaperonin, HSP10 were expressed in a E. coli strain, engineered so that the groE operon is under strict regulatory control. This study has demonstrated that expression of HSP60-HSP10 was able to carry out all essential in vivo functions of GroEL and its co-chaperonin, GroES (5). HSP60 has however been linked to a number of autoimmune diseases, as well as Alzheimer's, coronary artery diseases, MS, and diabetes (6-9).
REFERENCES
1. Hartl, F.U. (1996) Nature 381: 571-579.
2. Bukau, B. and Horwich, A.L. (1998) Cell 92: 351-366.
3. Hartl, F.U. and Hayer-Hartl, M. (2002) Science 295: 1852- 1858.
4. Jindal, S., et al. (1989) Molecular and Cellular Biology 9: 2279-2283.
5. La Verda, D., et al (1999) Infect Dis. Obstet. Gynecol. 7: 64-71.
6. Itoh, H. et al. (2002) Eur. J. Biochem. 269: 5931-5938.
7. Gupta, S. and Knowlton, A.A. J. Cell Mol Med. 9: 51-58.
8. Deocaris, C.C. et al. (2006) Cell Stress Chaperones 11: 116-128.
9. Lai, H.C. et al. (2007) Am. J. Physiol. Endocrinol. Metab. 292: E292-E297.
10. Gao, Y.L., et al (1995) J. of Immunology 154: 3548-3556.
11. Neuer, A., et al (1997) European Society for Human Reproduction and Embryology 12(5):925-929.
12. Bason, C., et al (2003) Lancet 362(9400): 1971-1977.
RESEARCH AREA
Cancer | Heat Shock | Cell Signaling | Protein Trafficking | Chaperone Proteins | Tags and Cell Markers | Organelle Markers
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
CPN60 Antibody, GROEL Antibody, HLD4 Antibody, HSP 60 Antibody, HSP65 Antibody, HSPD1 Antibody, HuCHA60 Antibody, SPG 13 Antibody