This webpage contains legacy information. The product is either no longer available from the supplier or has been delisted at Labome.
product summary
company name :
LifeSpan Biosciences
product type :
protein
product name :
Human FTH1 / Ferritin Heavy Chain Protein (Recombinant His-T7) (aa1-183) - LS-G15123
catalog :
LS-G15123
product information
ProteinId :
15123
CatalogNumber :
LS-G15123
Product Name :
Human FTH1 / Ferritin Heavy Chain Protein (Recombinant His-T7) (aa1-183) - LS-G15123
PresentationDesc :
Lyophilized from 100mMNaHCO3, 500mMNaCl, pH8.3, 0.01% sarcosyl, 5% Trehalose.
ProteinTag :
His-T7
ProteinType :
Recombinant
ProteinSpecies :
Human
ProteinSourceSpecies :
E. coli
RecommendedStorage :
Store at 4°C for up to 1 month, or aliquot and store at -80°C for up to 1 year. Avoid freeze-thaw cycles.
ReconstitutionInstructions :
Reconstitute in ddH2O to a concentration of 0.1-0.5 mg/ml. Do not vortex.
Purification :
Greater than 95%
PredictedMolecularWeight :
25.0 kDa
Gene :
FTH1 / Ferritin Heavy Chain
StandardGeneSymbol :
FTH1
Synonyms :
FTH1, Apoferritin, Ferritin H subunit, Ferritin heavy chain, Ferritin, heavy polypeptide 1, FHC, FTHL6, PIG15, PLIF, FTH
SalesRegion :
Worldwide
company information
LifeSpan Biosciences
2401 Fourth Avenue, Suite 900
Seattle, WA 98121
CustomerSupport@lsbio.com
https://www.lsbio.com
1-206-464-1554
headquarters: USA
Since 1995, LifeSpan has been the industry leader in molecular pathology, specializing in the localization of proteins in normal and diseased tissues, both human and non-human. We offer more than 74,000 antibodies, custom designed immunohistochemistry (IHC) studies, immediately available human tissue IHC profiles for more than 500 proteins, and histology and pathology services. Our bank of 2 million specimens is available to support our customers' contract research studies and contains frozen and formalin-fixed (FFPE) normal and diseased tissues. Our contract services are comprehensive; they include study design, antibody sourcing and characterization, tissue sourcing and validation, immunolabeling, trouble shooting, and interpretation of the results by a LifeSpan pathologist.