Catalogue number: |
PA1004-2 |
Price: |
$200.00 |
Reactivities: |
Human |
Applications: |
Western Blot |
Size: |
100?g/vial |
Gene: |
ALPL |
Swiss prot: |
P05186 |
Form: |
Lyophilized |
Format: |
Each vial contains 5mg BSA, 0.9mg NaCl, 0.2mg Na2HPO4, 0.05mg Thimerosal, 0.05mg NaN3. |
Storage temp: |
At -20 degree C for one year. After reconstitution, at 4 degree C for one month. It can also be aliquotted and stored frozen at -20 degree C for a longer time.
Avoid repeated freezing and thawing.
|
Scientific background: |
Alkaline phosphatase (ALPL) removes phosphate groups from the 5' end of DNA and RNA, and from proteins, at high pH. Most mammals have 4 different isozymes: placental, placental like, intestinal and non tissue specific (found in liver, kidney and bone). Tissues with particularly high concentrations of ALP include the liver, bile ducts, placenta, and bone. ALPL is the alkaline phosphatase of skin fibroblasts ,the tissue-nonspecific type, and that it is active toward millimolar concentrations of the putative natural substrates phosphoethanolamine (PEA) and pyridoxal-5-prime-phosphate (PLP). ALPL gene exists in single copy in the haploid genome and is composed of 12 exons distributed over more than 50 kb.Damaged or diseased tissue releases enzymes into the blood, so serum ALP measurements can be abnormal in many conditions, including bone disease and liver disease. |
References: |
1. Fedde, K. N.; Whyte, M. P. : Alkaline phosphatase (tissue-nonspecific isoenzyme) is a phosphoethanolamine and pyridoxal-5-prime-phosphate ectophosphatase: normal and hypophosphatasia fibroblast study. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 47: 767-775, 1990.
2. Weiss, M. J.; Cole, D. E. C.; Ray, K.; Whyte, M. P.; Lafferty, M. A.; Mulivor, R. A.; Harris, H. : A missense mutation in the human liver/bone/kidney alkaline phosphatase gene causing a lethal form of hypophosphatasia. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. 85: 7666-7669, 1988. |
Additional info: |
A synthetic peptide corresponding to a sequence at the N-terminus of human ALPL, different from the related mouse and rat sequences by three amino acids. |