Rabbit Polyclonal SYT2 antibody. Suitable for ELISA, WB, IHC-P and reacts with Human samples. Cited in 1 publication. Immunogen corresponding to Synthetic Peptide within Human SYT2.
View Alternative Names
Synaptotagmin-2, Synaptotagmin II, SytII, SYT2
- IHC-P
Unknown
Immunohistochemistry (Formalin/PFA-fixed paraffin-embedded sections) - Anti-Synaptotagmin antibody (AB133694)
Immunohistochemical analysis of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded Human brain, cortex neurons labelling Synaptotagmin with ab133694 at 15 μg/ml, followed by biotinylated goat anti-rabbit IgG secondary antibody, alkaline phosphatase-streptavidin and chromogen.
- WB
Unknown
Western blot - Anti-Synaptotagmin antibody (AB133694)
All lanes:
Western blot - Anti-Synaptotagmin antibody (ab133694) at 1/500 dilution
Lane 1:
Extract from 293 cells treated with Forskolin (40 nM 30')
Lane 2:
Extract from 293 cells treated with Forskolin (40 nM 30') with immunizing peptide
Predicted band size: 47 kDa
false
Reactivity data
Properties and storage information
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Purification technique
Storage buffer
Shipped at conditions
Appropriate short-term storage conditions
Appropriate long-term storage conditions
Storage information
Supplementary information
This supplementary information is collated from multiple sources and compiled automatically.
Biological function summary
Synaptotagmins play a central role in synaptic transmission and vesicular trafficking. They belong to a family of proteins involved in exocytosis where they interact as part of the SNARE complex. Synaptotagmin acts as a pivotal component by triggering vesicle fusion when it detects an influx of calcium ions. This process ultimately leads to the release of neurotransmitters into the synaptic cleft impacting numerous neural communication mechanisms.
Pathways
Synaptotagmins contribute significantly to synaptic vesicle cycling and calcium-mediated neuronal transmission. This protein is part of the synaptic vesicle cycle influencing pathways that regulate neurotransmitter release in response to calcium influx. It associates with proteins such as SNAP-25 and syntaxin working together to support vesicle docking and fusion processes essential for efficient synaptic signal transmission.
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Target data
Publications (1)
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Discover oncology 15:110 PubMed38598023
2024
Applications
Unspecified application
Species
Unspecified reactive species
Product promise
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