The At2g43260 Antibody (Product Code: CSB-PA854660XA01DOA) is a polyclonal antibody designed to detect the protein product of the At2g43260 gene in Arabidopsis thaliana. This gene is annotated in the UniProt database under accession number Q8S8Q9, though its exact biological function remains under investigation. The antibody is validated for applications such as Western blotting, immunohistochemistry, and immunofluorescence .
Antibodies against plant proteins often reveal roles in stress responses, development, or metabolism. Key findings from analogous research include:
Immune modulation: Antibodies targeting pathogen-associated proteins in plants have been used to study host-microbe interactions .
Structural insights: High-resolution imaging with antibodies has resolved subcellular localization of regulatory proteins .
Therapeutic potential: Engineered antibodies in clinical studies (e.g., anti-HIV or anti-cancer antibodies) highlight the broader utility of specificity-driven designs .
Specificity validation: Commercial antibodies require rigorous testing to avoid cross-reactivity, as seen in studies criticizing nonspecific angiotensin II receptor antibodies .
Epitope accessibility: Conformational changes in target proteins may affect antibody binding efficiency .
The At2g43260 Antibody could catalyze studies to:
The following FAQs address key research considerations for working with the At2g43260 antibody in academic contexts, structured to reflect scientific rigor and methodological depth:
Key findings:
Conformational epitopes (e.g., β-hairpin structures in CDR regions) enhance specificity over linear epitopes .
Non-competitive inhibition mechanisms observed in homologous antibodies suggest allosteric binding (e.g., C0021158’s ARG2 interaction) .
Co-crystallography data (e.g., 2.8 Å resolution structures) reveal critical hydrogen bonds at VH-CDR3 residues .
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