Recombinant Human Ubiquitin Mutant R74 Protein, CF

Catalog #: UM-R74 Datasheet / COA / SDS

Discontinued Product

UM-R74 has been discontinued.
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Recombinant Human Ubiquitin Mutant R74 Protein, CF Summary

Product Specifications

Purity
>95%, by SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions and visualized by Colloidal Coomassie® Blue stain
Activity
Ubiquitin can be conjugated to substrate proteins via the subsequent actions of a Ubiquitin-activating (E1) enzyme, a Ubiquitin-conjugating (E2) enzyme, and a Ubiquitin ligase (E3). Recombinant Human His6-Ubiquitin Mutant R74 is unable to be activated by E1 enzymes, making it ideal for use as a negative control for thioester formation. Reaction conditions will need to be optimized for each specific application.
Source
E. coli-derived human Ubiquitin protein
Accession #
Predicted Molecular Mass
8.5 kDa

Product Datasheets

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UM-R74

Carrier Free

What does CF mean?

CF stands for Carrier Free (CF). We typically add Bovine Serum Albumin (BSA) as a carrier protein to our recombinant proteins. Adding a carrier protein enhances protein stability, increases shelf-life, and allows the recombinant protein to be stored at a more dilute concentration. The carrier free version does not contain BSA.

What formulation is right for me?

In general, we advise purchasing the recombinant protein with BSA for use in cell or tissue culture, or as an ELISA standard. In contrast, the carrier free protein is recommended for applications, in which the presence of BSA could interfere.

UM-R74

Formulation Lyophilized from a solution in deionized water.
Reconstitution Reconstitute at 2 mg/mL in an aqueous solution.
Shipping The product is shipped at ambient temperature. Upon receipt, store it immediately at the temperature recommended below.
Stability & Storage: Use a manual defrost freezer and avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles.
  • 12 months from date of receipt, -20 to -70 °C as supplied.
  • 3 months, -20 to -70 °C under sterile conditions after reconstitution.
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Background: Ubiquitin

Ubiquitin is a 76 amino acid (aa) protein that is ubiquitously expressed in all eukaryotic organisms. Ubiquitin is highly conserved with 96% aa sequence identity shared between human and yeast Ubiquitin, and 100% aa sequence identity shared between human and mouse Ubiquitin (1). In mammals, four Ubiquitin genes encode for two Ubiquitin-ribosomal fusion proteins and two poly-Ubiquitin proteins. Cleavage of the Ubiquitin precursors by deubiquitinating enzymes gives rise to identical Ubiquitin monomers each with a predicted molecular weight of 8.6 kDa. Conjugation of Ubiquitin to target proteins involves the formation of an isopeptide bond between the C-terminal glycine residue of Ubiquitin and a lysine residue in the target protein. This process of conjugation, referred to as ubiquitination or ubiquitylation, is a multi-step process that requires three enzymes: a Ubiquitin-activating (E1) enzyme, a Ubiquitin-conjugating (E2) enzyme, and a Ubiquitin ligase (E3). Ubiquitination is classically recognized as a mechanism to target proteins for degradation and as a result, Ubiquitin was originally named ATP-dependent Proteolysis Factor 1 (APF-1) (2,3). In addition to protein degradation, ubiquitination has been shown to mediate a variety of biological processes such as signal transduction, endocytosis, and post-endocytic sorting (4-7).

Mature forms of Ubiquitin have a highly conserved diglycine motif at the carboxyl terminus which is crucial for activity and recognition in conjugation and deconjugation reactions. The removal of this diglycine peptide (Ubiquitin ending in Arg74) results in an inactive Ubiquitin. This Ubiquitin cannot be activated by the Ubiquitin-activating (E1) enzyme in an ATP-dependent manner, is not capable of subsequent thioester interaction with Ubiquitin-conjugating (E2) enzymes and/or Ubiquitin ligases (E3), and is thus not capable of forming isopeptide bonds or Ubiquitin conjugates. It can be used as a negative control in conjugation reactions, or inbinding studies with Ubiquitin-activating (E1) enzymes, Ubiquitin-conjugating (E2) enzymes, Ubiquitin ligases (E3), and DUB enzymes or other proteins that interact with Ubiquitin via Ubiquitin-associated domains (UBAs) or Ubiquitin-interacting motifs (UIMs).

References
  1. Sharp, P.M. & W.-H. Li. (1987) Trends Ecol. Evol. 2:328.
  2. Ciechanover, A. et al. (1980 ) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 77:1365.
  3. Hershko, A. et al. (1980) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 77:1783.
  4. Greene, W. et al. (2012) PLoS Pathog. 8:e1002703.
  5. Tong, X. et al. (2012) J. Biol. Chem. 287:25280.
  6. Wei, W. et al. (2004) Nature 428:194.
  7. Wertz, I.E. et al. (2004) Nature 430:694.
Entrez Gene IDs
7314 (Human); 298693 (Rat)
Alternate Names
RPS27A; UBA52; UBB ubiquitin B; UBB; UBC; Ubiquitin

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