ATM / DyLight 650 / Polyclonal

Product Details
Supplier Thermo Fisher Scientific
Catalog #: PA522689 (View supplier product page)
Size 50 μl
Price $354.00
Antigen ATM
Clone Polyclonal
Host Rabbit
Isotype IgG
Conjugate DyLight 650
Target Species Human, Mouse
Applications IF, WB, ICC
Description ATM Polyclonal Antibody, DyLight 650 conjugate. Ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) is a recessive childhood disease caused by mutations in the ATM (AT-mutated) gene. Symptoms include neurological abnormalities that cause unsteady posture, dilated blood vessels, infertility, radiation sensitivity, immune deficiencies and lymphoid malignancies. It appears that the diverse defects seen in ATM null mammals are manifestations of disparate signal transduction defects. The ATM protein is related to a family of proteins through a C-terminal phoshatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase) domain. Members of the PI3-kinase family of proteins are involved in cell cycle control, DNA replication, recombination and repair. ATM also shares sequence homology with portions of the yeast RAD3 gene. The main role of ATM appears to be induction of a DNA-damage control pathway in response to genotoxic insults, such as ionizing radiation or anti-tumor medications and the programmed DNA breaks of meiosis. ATM has also been linked to apoptosis along with Nbs1 and Chk2 in the E2F1 pathway. (Rogoff et. al.)IF 1:100, IHC 1:100, IP 1:10-1:500, WB 1:500-1:1000, ICC 1:100
About ATM and DyLight 650
ATM The protein encoded by this gene belongs to the PI3/PI4-kinase family. This protein is an important cell cycle checkpoint kinase that phosphorylates; thus, it functions as a regulator of a wide variety of downstream proteins, including tumor suppressor proteins p53 and BRCA1, checkpoint kinase CHK2, checkpoint proteins RAD17 and RAD9, and DNA repair protein NBS1. This protein and the closely related kinase ATR are thought to be master controllers of cell cycle checkpoint signaling pathways that are required for cell response to DNA damage and for genome stability. Mutations in this gene are associated with ataxia telangiectasia, an autosomal recessive disorder. [provided by RefSeq, Aug 2010]
DyLight 650 DyLight™ 650 is a red-emitting fluorophore that excited by the 640 nm laser and collected using a 670/30 nm bandpass filter. DyLight™ 650 has an excitation peak at 652 nm and an emission peak at 672 nm, and is spectrally similar to Alexa Fluor™ 647 and Cy5. DyLight™ 650 is most commonly used in flow cytometery and fluorescence microscopy applications.
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DyLight 650 Excitation and Emission Spectra