Skip to content Skip to footer
0 items - $0.00 0

GluR-2 (phospho Ser880) rabbit pAb

GluR-2 (phospho Ser880) rabbit pAb

ENT-A5616

Description

 

 

 

REF ENT-A5616
Category Antibody Polyclonal
Description GluR-2 (phospho Ser880) rabbit pAb
Source Rabbit
Applications WB;IHC;IF;ELISA
Reactivity Human;Mouse;Rat
Reactivity Human;Mouse;Rat
Dilution Western Blot: 1/500 – 1/2000. Immunohistochemistry: 1/100 – 1/300. ELISA: 1/20000. Not yet tested in other applications.
Immunogen The antiserum was produced against synthesized peptide derived from human GluR2 around the phosphorylation site of Ser880. AA range:834-883
Storage Stability -20°C/1 year
Clonality Polyclonal
Isotype IgG
Concentration 1 mg/ml
Observed Band KD 99kD
Human Gene ID 2891
Human Swiss Prot Nº P42262
Subcellular Location Cell membrane ; Multi-pass membrane protein . Endoplasmic reticulum membrane ; Multi-pass membrane protein . Cell junction, synapse, postsynaptic cell membrane ; Multi-pass membrane protein . Cell junction, synapse, postsynaptic density membrane ; Multi-pass membrane protein . Interaction with CACNG2, CNIH2 and CNIH3 promotes cell surface expression (By similarity). Displays a somatodendritic localization and is excluded from axons in neurons (By similarity). .

Other Name: GRIA2; GLUR2; Glutamate receptor 2; GluR-2; AMPA-selective glutamate receptor 2; GluR-B; GluR-K2; Glutamate receptor ionotropic; AMPA 2; GluA2

Background: Glutamate receptors are the predominant excitatory neurotransmitter receptors in the mammalian brain and are activated in a variety of normal neurophysiologic processes. This gene product belongs to a family of glutamate receptors that are sensitive to alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionate (AMPA), and function as ligand-activated cation channels. These channels are assembled from 4 related subunits, GRIA1-4. The subunit encoded by this gene (GRIA2) is subject to RNA editing (CAG->CGG; Q->R) within the second transmembrane domain, which is thought to render the channel impermeable to Ca(2+). Human and animal studies suggest that pre-mRNA editing is essential for brain function, and defective GRIA2 RNA editing at the Q/R site may be relevant to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) etiology. Alternative splicing, resulting in transcript variants enco