Rabbit Polyclonal PTPRN2 antibody. Suitable for IHC-P, WB, ICC/IF and reacts with Human samples. Immunogen corresponding to Recombinant Fragment Protein within Human PTPRN2 aa 350-500.
View Alternative Names
KIAA0387, PTPRN2, Receptor-type tyrosine-protein phosphatase N2, R-PTP-N2, Islet cell autoantigen-related protein, Phogrin, IAR, ICAAR
- IHC-P
Unknown
Immunohistochemistry (Formalin/PFA-fixed paraffin-embedded sections) - Anti-PTPRN2 antibody (AB244293)
Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded human liver tissue stained for PTPRN2 with ab244293 at a 1/50 dilution in immunohistochemical analysis.
- ICC/IF
Unknown
Immunocytochemistry/ Immunofluorescence - Anti-PTPRN2 antibody (AB244293)
PFA fixed, Triton X-100 permeabilized AF22 cells labeling PTPRN2 using ab244293 at 4 μg/ml (green) in ICC/IF.
- WB
Unknown
Western blot - Anti-PTPRN2 antibody (AB244293)
All lanes:
Western blot - Anti-PTPRN2 antibody (ab244293) at 0.4 µg/mL
All lanes:
U-87 MG (Human glioblastoma-astrocytoma epithelial cell line) cell lysate
Predicted band size: 111 kDa
false
Reactivity data
Properties and storage information
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Supplementary information
This supplementary information is collated from multiple sources and compiled automatically.
Biological function summary
PTPRN2 participates in the regulation and secretion of hormones and neurotransmitters. It is an integral part of the vesicle trafficking complex impacting the exocytosis process. Studies show that PTPRN2 influences the storage and release of insulin and other neurotransmitters by stabilizing secretory granules. This protein’s expression pattern suggests it may also have roles in neuronal communication and hormone modulation.
Pathways
Research shows PTPRN2 influences the insulin secretory pathway and neuropeptide signaling. It interacts with other proteins like SNAP25 and Synaptotagmin which are involved in synaptic vesicle fusion and neurotransmitter release. PTPRN2’s role in these pathways indicates its importance in communication in neuronal and endocrine systems linking it to broader signaling networks.
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Product promise
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