HEXA blocking peptide product blog
Tags: HEXA; Blocking Peptide; HEXA blocking peptide;
The HEXA hexa (Catalog #MBS8244005) is a Blocking Peptide produced from Synthetic and is intended for research purposes only. The product is available for immediate purchase. The HEXA Blocking Peptide reacts with Human, Mouse, Rat and may cross-react with other species as described in the data sheet. MyBioSource\'s HEXA can be used in a range of immunoassay formats including, but not limited to, Blocking (BL).Blocking Peptide to the diluted primary antibody in a molar ratio of 10:1 (peptide to antibody) and incubate the mixture at 4 degree C for overnight or at room temperature for 2 hours. Researchers should empirically determine the suitability of the HEXA hexa for an application not listed in the data sheet. Researchers commonly develop new applications and it is an integral, important part of the investigative research process.
The HEXA hexa product has the following accession number(s) (GI #311033393) (NCBI Accession #P06865.2) (Uniprot Accession #P06865). Researchers may be interested in using Bioinformatics databases such as those available at The National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) website for more information about accession numbers and the proteins they represent. Even researchers unfamiliar with bioinformatics databases will find the NCBI databases to be quite user friendly and useful.
To buy or view more detailed product information and pricing, please click on the technical datasheet page below:
The peptide is used to block Anti-HEXA Antibody reactivity.
Quality Control: The quality of the peptide was evaluated by reversed-phase HPLC and by mass spectrometry. Blood, Brain, Connective Tissue, Heart, Intestine, Kidney, Liver, Lung, Muscle, Skin tissues are correlated with this protein. HEXA also interacts with the following gene(s): CHIA, GLB1, GM2A, HEXB, NAGA, ST3GAL5, ST8SIA1. Cardiovascular Diseases, Death, Fibrosis, Hepatitis, Inflammation, Kidney Diseases, Liver Diseases, Necrosis, Poisoning, Tay-Sachs Disease are some of the diseases may be linked to HEXA Blocking Peptide. The following patways have been known to be associated with this gene.