product summary
Loading...
company name :
MyBioSource
product type :
protein
product name :
Recombinant Human Putative RNA-binding protein 3
catalog :
MBS961297
quantity :
0.05 mg (E-Coli)
price :
190 USD
more info or order :
product information
catalog number :
MBS961297
products type :
Recombinant Protein
products full name :
Recombinant Human Putative RNA-binding protein 3
products short name :
Putative RNA-binding protein 3
products name syn :
RNA-binding motif protein 3; RNPL
other names :
RNA-binding protein 3; RNA-binding protein 3; RNA-binding protein 3; RNA binding motif (RNP1, RRM) protein 3; RNA-binding motif protein 3; RNPL
products gene name :
RBM3
other gene names :
RBM3; RBM3; RNPL; IS1-RNPL; RNPL
uniprot entry name :
RBM3_HUMAN
host :
E Coli or Yeast or Baculovirus or Mammalian Cell
sequence positions :
1-157
sequence length :
157
sequence :
MSSEEGKLFVGGLNFNTDEQALEDHFSSFGPISEVVVVK
DRETQRSRGFGFITFTNPEHASVAMRAMNGESLDGRQIR
VDHAGKSARGTRGGGFGAHGRGRSYSRGGGDQGYGSGRY
YDSRPGGYGYGYGRSRDYNGRNQGGYDRYSGGNYRDNYD
N
purity :
Greater than 90% as determined by SDS-PAGE.
form :
Liquid containing glycerol; lyophilization may be available upon request.
storage stability :
Store at -20 degree C, for extended storage, conserve at -20 degree C or -80 degree C.
products categories :
Epigenetics and Nuclear Signaling
products description :
Cold-inducible mRNA binding protein that enhances global protein synthesis at both physiological and mild hypothermic temperatures. Reduces the relative abundance of microRNAs, when overexpressed. Enhances phosphorylation of translation initiation factors and active polysome formation.
products references :
RBM3, a novel human gene in Xp11.23 with a putative RNA-binding domain.Derry J.M., Kerns J.A., Francke U.Hum. Mol. Genet. 4:2307-2311(1995) The DNA sequence of the human X chromosome.Ross M.T., Grafham D.V., Coffey A.J., Scherer S., McLay K., Muzny D., Platzer M., Howell G.R., Burrows C., Bird C.P., Frankish A., Lovell F.L., Howe K.L., Ashurst J.L., Fulton R.S., Sudbrak R., Wen G., Jones M.C., Hurles M.E., Andrews T.D., Scott C.E., Searle S., Ramser J., Whittaker A., Deadman R., Carter N.P., Hunt S.E., Chen R., Cree A., Gunaratne P., Havlak P., Hodgson A., Metzker M.L., Richards S., Scott G., Steffen D., Sodergren E., Wheeler D.A., Worley K.C., Ainscough R., Ambrose K.D., Ansari-Lari M.A., Aradhya S., Ashwell R.I., Babbage A.K., Bagguley C.L., Ballabio A., Banerjee R., Barker G.E., Barlow K.F., Barrett I.P., Bates K.N., Beare D.M., Beasley H., Beasley O., Beck A., Bethel G., Blechschmidt K., Brady N., Bray-Allen S., Bridgeman A.M., Brown A.J., Brown M.J., Bonnin D., Bruford E.A., Buhay C., Burch P., Burford D., Burgess J., Burrill W., Burton J., Bye J.M., Carder C., Carrel L., Chako J., Chapman J.C., Chavez D., Chen E., Chen G., Chen Y., Chen Z., Chinault C., Ciccodicola A., Clark S.Y., Clarke G., Clee C.M., Clegg S., Clerc-Blankenburg K., Clifford K., Cobley V., Cole C.G., Conquer J.S., Corby N., Connor R.E., David R., Davies J., Davis C., Davis J., Delgado O., Deshazo D., Dhami P., Ding Y., Dinh H., Dodsworth S., Draper H., Dugan-Rocha S., Dunham A., Dunn M., Durbin K.J., Dutta I., Eades T., Ellwood M., Emery-Cohen A., Errington H., Evans K.L., Faulkner L., Francis F., Frankland J., Fraser A.E., Galgoczy P., Gilbert J., Gill R., Gloeckner G., Gregory S.G., Gribble S., Griffiths C., Grocock R., Gu Y., Gwilliam R., Hamilton C., Hart E.A., Hawes A., Heath P.D., Heitmann K., Hennig S., Hernandez J., Hinzmann B., Ho S., Hoffs M., Howden P.J., Huckle E.J., Hume J., Hunt P.J., Hunt A.R., Isherwood J., Jacob L., Johnson D., Jones S., de Jong P.J., Joseph S.S., Keenan S., Kelly S., Kershaw J.K., Khan Z., Kioschis P., Klages S., Knights A.J., Kosiura A., Kovar-Smith C., Laird G.K., Langford C., Lawlor S., Leversha M., Lewis L., Liu W., Lloyd C., Lloyd D.M., Loulseged H., Loveland J.E., Lovell J.D., Lozado R., Lu J., Lyne R., Ma J., Maheshwari M., Matthews L.H., McDowall J., McLaren S., McMurray A., Meidl P., Meitinger T., Milne S., Miner G., Mistry S.L., Morgan M., Morris S., Mueller I., Mullikin J.C., Nguyen N., Nordsiek G., Nyakatura G., O'dell C.N., Okwuonu G., Palmer S., Pandian R., Parker D., Parrish J., Pasternak S., Patel D., Pearce A.V., Pearson D.M., Pelan S.E., Perez L., Porter K.M., Ramsey Y., Reichwald K., Rhodes S., Ridler K.A., Schlessinger D., Schueler M.G., Sehra H.K., Shaw-Smith C., Shen H., Sheridan E.M., Shownkeen R., Skuce C.D., Smith M.L., Sotheran E.C., Steingruber H.E., Steward C.A., Storey R., Swann R.M., Swarbreck D., Tabor P.E., Taudien S., Taylor T., Teague B., Thomas K., Thorpe A., Timms K., Tracey A., Trevanion S., Tromans A.C., d'Urso M., Verduzco D., Villasana D., Waldron L., Wall M., Wang Q., Warren J., Warry G.L., Wei X., West A., Whitehead S.L., Whiteley M.N., Wilkinson J.E., Willey D.L., Williams G., Williams L., Williamson A., Williamson H., Wilming L., Woodmansey R.L., Wray P.W., Yen J., Zhang J., Zhou J., Zoghbi H., Zorilla S., Buck D., Reinhardt R., Poustka A., Rosenthal A., Lehrach H., Meindl A., Minx P.J., Hillier L.W., Willard H.F., Wilson R.K., Waterston R.H., Rice C.M., Vaudin M., Coulson A., Nelson D.L., Weinstock G., Sulston J.E., Durbin R.M., Hubbard T., Gibbs R.A., Beck S., Rogers J., Bentley D.R.Nature 434:325-337(2005) Bienvenut W.V., Lilla S., von Kriegsheim A., Lempens A., Kolch W.Submitted (DEC-2008) to UniProtKB Robust phosphoproteomic profiling of tyrosine phosphorylation sites from human T cells using immobilized metal affinity chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry.Brill L.M., Salomon A.R., Ficarro S.B., Mukherji M., Stettler-Gill M., Peters E.C.Anal. Chem. 76:2763-2772(2004) Oxygen-regulated expression of the RNA-binding proteins RBM3 and CIRP by a HIF-1-independent mechanism.Wellmann S., Buehrer C., Moderegger E., Zelmer A., Kirschner R., Koehne P., Fujita J., Seeger K.J. Cell Sci. 117:1785-1794(2004) A quantitative atlas of mitotic phosphorylation.Dephoure N., Zhou C., Villen J., Beausoleil S.A., Bakalarski C.E., Elledge S.J., Gygi S.P.Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 105:10762-10767(2008) Initial characterization of the human central proteome.Burkard T.R., Planyavsky M., Kaupe I., Breitwieser F.P., Buerckstuemmer T., Bennett K.L., Superti-Furga G., Colinge J.BMC Syst. Biol. 5:17-17(2011) An enzyme assisted RP-RPLC approach for in-depth analysis of human liver phosphoproteome.Bian Y., Song C., Cheng K., Dong M., Wang F., Huang J., Sun D., Wang L., Ye M., Zou H.J. Proteomics 96:253-262(2014)
ncbi gi num :
5803137
ncbi acc num :
NP_006734.1
ncbi gb acc num :
NM_006743.4
uniprot acc num :
P98179
ncbi mol weight :
33.16kD
ncbi summary :
This gene is a member of the glycine-rich RNA-binding protein family and encodes a protein with one RNA recognition motif (RRM) domain. Expression of this gene is induced by cold shock and low oxygen tension. A pseudogene exists on chromosome 1. Multiple alternatively spliced transcript variants that are predicted to encode different isoforms have been characterized although some of these variants fit nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) criteria. [provided by RefSeq, Jul 2008]
uniprot summary :
RBM3: Cold-inducible mRNA binding protein that enhances global protein synthesis at both physiological and mild hypothermic temperatures. Reduces the relative abundance of microRNAs, when overexpressed. Enhances phosphorylation of translation initiation factors and active polysome formation. Protein type: RNA-binding; Ribosomal; Translation; RNA processing. Chromosomal Location of Human Ortholog: Xp11.2. Cellular Component: cytoplasm; dendrite; large ribosomal subunit; nucleolus; nucleoplasm; nucleus. Molecular Function: nucleotide binding; protein binding; ribosomal large subunit binding; RNA binding. Biological Process: miRNA-mediated gene silencing, production of miRNAs; positive regulation of translation; regulation of translation; response to cold; RNA processing; translation
size1 :
0.05 mg (E-Coli)
price1 :
190 USD
size2 :
0.05 mg (Yeast)
price2 :
190
size3 :
0.2 mg (E-Coli)
price3 :
460
size4 :
0.2 mg (Yeast)
price4 :
460
size5 :
0.5 mg (Yeast)
price5 :
750
more info or order :
company information
MyBioSource
P.O. Box 153308
San Diego, CA 92195-3308
sales@mybiosource.com
https://www.mybiosource.com
1-888-627-0165
headquarters: USA
MyBioSource, LLC was orginally founded in Vancouver by three enthusiastic scientists who are passionate about providing the world with the best reagents available. Together, they form a company with a big vision known as MyBioSource. MyBioSource is now located in San Diego, California, USA.

"MyBioSource's number 1 vision is to be the world's number 1 quality reagents provider."

Our goal is to provide researchers, scientists and customers alike with a one-stop-shop for all of their reagents needs, whether it is monoclonal antibody, polyclonal antibody, recombinant protein, peptide, etc...

"MyBioSource offers the best products at unbeatable prices."

Please spend a few minutes to browse our online catalogs and see the wide range of products available. We ship our products through our shipping/distribution facility in San Diego, California, USA.

Would you like to receive email and e-newsletter from MyBioSource about new products, special offers and events? Please click here to join our Mailing List!