TRIP13-H00A

Family :

Protease and Enzyme

Catalog No. :

TRIP13-H00A

Protein :

TRIP13

UniProt :

Q15645

Organism :

Homo sapiens

Expression system :

E. coli

Tag :

No tag

Sequence :

M1-I432

Assay :

Structure :

Inquiry :

Symbol/Gene Name:  TRIP13

Alias:  Pachytene checkpoint protein 2 homolog,Human papillomavirus type 16 E1 protein-binding protein,16E1-BP,HPV16 E1 protein-binding protein,Thyroid hormone receptor interactor 13,Thyroid receptor-interacting protein 13,TR-interacting protein 13,TRIP-13

Uniprot: Q15645

Background: Plays a key role in chromosome recombination and chromosome structure development during meiosis. Required at early steps in meiotic recombination that leads to non-crossovers pathways. Also needed for efficient completion of homologous synapsis by influencing crossover distribution along the chromosomes affecting both crossovers and non-crossovers pathways. Also required for development of higher-order chromosome structures and is needed for synaptonemal-complex formation. In males, required for efficient synapsis of the sex chromosomes and for sex body formation. Promotes early steps of the DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) repair process upstream of the assembly of RAD51 complexes. Required for depletion of HORMAD1 and HORMAD2 from synapsed chromosomes (By similarity). Plays a role in mitotic spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) activation (PubMed:28553959).

Construct: GG-TRIP13(M1-I432 end)

Expression Host: E. coli

Purity: 90%

Formulation: 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH7.5), 200 mM NaCl, 20% glycerol

Supplied as sterile

Please contact us for any concerns or special requirements.

Please refer to the specific buffer information in the hard copy of CoA.

Endotoxin:

< 0.01 EU per μg of the protein

Shipping:

Liquid. It is shipped out with blue ice.

Stability & Storage:

Samples are stable for up to twelve months from date of receipt at -20 to -80

Store it under sterile conditions at -20 to -80. It is recommended that the protein be aliquoted for optimal storage. Avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles.