Anti-Histone H4-Dimethyl-Arg3 Antibody (N309A/21)
Our Anti-Histone H4-dimethyl-Arg3 mouse monoclonal primary antibody from NeuroMab is produced in-house from hybridoma clone N309A/21. It detects human, mouse, and rat Histone H4-dimethyl-Arg3, and is purified by Protein A chromatography. It is great for use in DB, ELISA.
SKU: 75-320
Product Details
Histone H4-dimethyl-Arg3
Histone H4 (which is also known by many other names and is recognized by the accession number P62805) is encoded by the gene H4C1 (which is also known by many other names). Histones organize DNA into nucleosomes and are the main structural component of chromatin.
Purified by Protein A chromatography
1 mg/mL
Monoclonal
N309A/21
IgG2b
ELISA
Mouse
HIST1H4A H4/A H4FA; HIST1H4B H4/I H4FI; HIST1H4C H4/G H4FG; HIST1H4D H4/B H4FB; HIST1H4E H4/J H4FJ; HIST1H4F H4/C H4FC; HIST1H4H H4/H H4FH; HIST1H4I H4/M H4FM; HIST1H4J H4/E H4FE; HIST1H4K H4/D H4FD; HIST1H4L H4/K H4FK; HIST2H4A H4/N H4F2 H4FN HIST2H4; HIST2H4B H4/O H4FO; HIST4H4
11 kDa
Synthetic peptide amino acids 2-11 (SG[dimethyl-R-asymmetric]GKGGKGL) of human Histone H4 (accession number P62805)
Human, Mouse, Rat
AB_2315853
Aliquot and store at ≤ -20°C for long term storage. For short term storage, store at 2-8°C. For maximum recovery of product, centrifuge the vial prior to removing the cap.
Liquid
Produced by in vitro bioreactor culture of hybridoma line followed by Protein A affinity chromatography. Purified mAbs are >90% specific antibody.
10 mM Tris, 50 mM Sodium Chloride, 0.065% Sodium Azide pH 7.125
Unconjugated
Does not cross-react with unmethylated Histone H4
These antibodies are to be used as research laboratory reagents and are not for use as diagnostic or therapeutic reagents in humans.
United States
24 months from date of receipt
Shipped on ice packs
Histone H4
UniProt (Human): P62805
UniProt (Immunogen Species): P62805
UniProt (Immunogen Species): P62805
Product Specific References
- Additional Publications: Unspecified
Publications: Unspecified | ||
PMID | Publication | |
25421653 | Satterlee, J.S., et al. 2015. Community resources and technologies developed through the NIH Roadmap Epigenomics Program. Methods in Molecular Biology, 27-49. |