Recombinant Somatostatin (SST) Antibody, Clone: [MSVA-638R], Rabbit, Monoclonal

Catalog Number: NBT-6750-RBM16-P1
Article Name: Recombinant Somatostatin (SST) Antibody, Clone: [MSVA-638R], Rabbit, Monoclonal
Biozol Catalog Number: NBT-6750-RBM16-P1
Supplier Catalog Number: 6750-RBM16-P1
Alternative Catalog Number: NBT-6750-RBM16-P1-100
Manufacturer: NeoBiotechnologies
Host: Rabbit
Category: Antikörper
Application: IHC
Species Reactivity: Human
Immunogen: Recombinant fragment of human SST protein (exact sequence is proprietary)
Alternative Names: Growth hormone release-inhibiting factor, Prepro somatostatin, SMS_HUMAN, SMST, Somatostatin 14, Somatostatin 28, SST
Somatostatin is a regulatory hormone that is expressed throughout the body and inhibits the release of numerous secondary hormones by binding to highaffinity G protein-coupled somatostatin receptors. This cyclic tetradecapeptide inhibits the secretion of many important hormones, including somatotropin (also designated growth hormone, or GH), Insulin and glucagon. Somatostatin is found in both the hypothalamus and pancreas. Somatostatin is thought to be involved in the regulation of Insulin synthesis. The hormone somatostatin has active 14 amino acid and 28 amino acid forms that are produced by alternate cleavage of the single preproprotein encoded by this gene. In the cerebellum, Somatostatin-14 and Somatostatin-28 are highly expressed at birth and in the adult stage, respectively. Somatostatin affects rates of neurotransmission in the central nervous system and proliferation of both normal and tumorigenic cells. The gene encoding Somatostatin maps to human chromosome 3q27.3.
Clonality: Monoclonal
Clone Designation: [MSVA-638R]
Molecular Weight: 17kDa
NCBI: 6750
UniProt: P61278
Form: Ab produced in HEK293 cell mammalian-based expression system. Prepared in 10mM PBS with 0.05% BSA & 0.05% azide. Also available WITHOUT BSA & azide.
Rabbit Recombinant Monoclonal Antibody (MSVA-638R) tested on many normal and cancer tissues. The immunohistochemistry staining in these tissues aligns with the expression data in Human Protein Atlas.