Recombinant Human TIE2 protein
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Recombinant Human TIE2 protein is a Human Fragment protein, in the 23 to 748 aa range, expressed in HEK 293 cells, with >95%, <0.005 EU/µg endotoxin level, suitable for SDS-PAGE, Mass Spec, HPLC.
View Alternative Names
CD202b, TIE2, VMCM, VMCM1, TEK, Angiopoietin-1 receptor, Endothelial tyrosine kinase, Tunica interna endothelial cell kinase, Tyrosine kinase with Ig and EGF homology domains-2, Tyrosine-protein kinase receptor TEK, Tyrosine-protein kinase receptor TIE-2, p140 TEK, hTIE2
- Mass Spec
Supplier Data
Mass Spectrometry - Recombinant Human TIE2 protein (AB283468)
ESI-TOF analysis of ab283468.
Predicted MW is 81069.44 Da (+/- 10 Da by ESI TOF). Observed MW is 81064.34 Da.
- HPLC
Unknown
HPLC - Recombinant Human TIE2 protein (AB283468)
HPLC analysis of ab283468.
- SDS-PAGE
Supplier Data
SDS-PAGE - Recombinant Human TIE2 protein (AB283468)
SDS-PAGE analysis of ab283468.
Reactivity data
Sequence info
Properties and storage information
Shipped at conditions
Appropriate short-term storage conditions
Appropriate long-term storage conditions
Supplementary information
This supplementary information is collated from multiple sources and compiled automatically.
Biological function summary
TIE2 plays a central role in angiogenesis and blood vessel maturation. It forms a receptor complex with other components to mediate its effects. This interaction mainly involves Angpt1 which binds to TIE2 stabilizing blood vessels and preserving their integrity. TIE2 also participates in cell survival and migration processes necessary for normal vascular function. Researchers often perform Angpt1 ELISA in bulk to quantify interactions involving TIE2 in experiments.
Pathways
TIE2 is important in the angiopoietin-TIE signaling pathway regulating vascular development. TIE2 is related to proteins such as Angpt1 which are centrally involved in this pathway. It also interacts with various signaling molecules including phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K) which contributes to cell survival pathways. Alterations in the TIE2 signaling cascade can lead to aberrant angiogenesis and related pathologies.
Specifications
Form
Lyophilized
Additional notes
>= 95% pure by HPLC.
General info
Function
Tyrosine-protein kinase that acts as a cell-surface receptor for ANGPT1, ANGPT2 and ANGPT4 and regulates angiogenesis, endothelial cell survival, proliferation, migration, adhesion and cell spreading, reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton, but also maintenance of vascular quiescence. Has anti-inflammatory effects by preventing the leakage of pro-inflammatory plasma proteins and leukocytes from blood vessels. Required for normal angiogenesis and heart development during embryogenesis. Required for post-natal hematopoiesis. After birth, activates or inhibits angiogenesis, depending on the context. Inhibits angiogenesis and promotes vascular stability in quiescent vessels, where endothelial cells have tight contacts. In quiescent vessels, ANGPT1 oligomers recruit TEK to cell-cell contacts, forming complexes with TEK molecules from adjoining cells, and this leads to preferential activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and the AKT1 signaling cascades. In migrating endothelial cells that lack cell-cell adhesions, ANGT1 recruits TEK to contacts with the extracellular matrix, leading to the formation of focal adhesion complexes, activation of PTK2/FAK and of the downstream kinases MAPK1/ERK2 and MAPK3/ERK1, and ultimately to the stimulation of sprouting angiogenesis. ANGPT1 signaling triggers receptor dimerization and autophosphorylation at specific tyrosine residues that then serve as binding sites for scaffold proteins and effectors. Signaling is modulated by ANGPT2 that has lower affinity for TEK, can promote TEK autophosphorylation in the absence of ANGPT1, but inhibits ANGPT1-mediated signaling by competing for the same binding site. Signaling is also modulated by formation of heterodimers with TIE1, and by proteolytic processing that gives rise to a soluble TEK extracellular domain. The soluble extracellular domain modulates signaling by functioning as decoy receptor for angiopoietins. TEK phosphorylates DOK2, GRB7, GRB14, PIK3R1; SHC1 and TIE1.
Sequence similarities
Belongs to the protein kinase superfamily. Tyr protein kinase family. Tie subfamily.
Post-translational modifications
Proteolytic processing leads to the shedding of the extracellular domain (soluble TIE-2 alias sTIE-2).. Autophosphorylated on tyrosine residues in response to ligand binding. Autophosphorylation occurs in trans, i.e. one subunit of the dimeric receptor phosphorylates tyrosine residues on the other subunit. Autophosphorylation occurs in a sequential manner, where Tyr-992 in the kinase activation loop is phosphorylated first, followed by autophosphorylation at Tyr-1108 and at additional tyrosine residues. ANGPT1-induced phosphorylation is impaired during hypoxia, due to increased expression of ANGPT2. Phosphorylation is important for interaction with GRB14, PIK3R1 and PTPN11. Phosphorylation at Tyr-1102 is important for interaction with SHC1, GRB2 and GRB7. Phosphorylation at Tyr-1108 is important for interaction with DOK2 and for coupling to downstream signal transduction pathways in endothelial cells. Dephosphorylated by PTPRB.. Ubiquitinated. The phosphorylated receptor is ubiquitinated and internalized, leading to its degradation.
Subcellular localisation
Cytoskeleton
Target data
Product promise
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