Mouse Nidogen-2 Alexa Fluor™ Plus 680-conjugated Antibody
R&D Systems, part of Bio-Techne | Catalog # AF6760AFP680
Key Product Details
Species Reactivity
Applications
Label
Antibody Source
Product Specifications
Immunogen
Specificity
Clonality
Host
Isotype
Applications
Western Blot
Formulation, Preparation, and Storage
Formulation
Shipping
Stability & Storage
Background: Nidogen-2
Nidogen-2 (also named entactin-2) is a 160-200 kDa, secreted, monomeric basement membrane glycoprotein (1,2). Nidogens 1 and 2 are expressed in nearly all basement membranes (1-4) where they interact with laminins, collagen type IV and proteoglycan family members to form structural scaffolds (5, 6). Mice deleted for both nidogen genes die at birth due to delayed basement membrane maturation of the lungs and heart (1). However, deletion of one nidogen gives a mild phenotype, indicating that their functions overlap (1, 7). In adult, muscle Nidogen-2 expression is concentrated in the basal lamina of synapses and is required for their maturation and maintenance (8). Both nidogens bind laminin, perlecan and collagens I and IV, but only Nidogen-1 binds fibulins (1, 4). The two nidogens share approximately 40% amino acid (aa) identity in mouse and are structurally similar (1, 2, 5). Cleavage of a 30 aa signal sequence from mouse Nidogen-2 produces a 1373 aa mature protein containing three globular domains (G1-3) separated by a link region and an extended rod-shaped segment. The G1 domain is reported to bind type IV collagen, the G2 nidogen ( beta-barrel) domain interacts with perlecan, and the C-terminal G3 beta-propeller structure is associated with laminin binding. The mucin-like link region is longer in Nidogen-2 than Nidogen-1, and contains both N- and O-glycosylation (3, 8). It contains one EGF-like motif, and an RGD motif that binds alpha3 beta1 integrins. The rod-shaped segment contains four additional EGF-like motifs, two of which bind calcium, and two thyroglobulin type 1 domains that serve as a binding site for alphav beta3 integrins. If species‑specific insertions and deletions are disregarded, mature mouse Nidogen-2 shares 80%, 92%, 74%, 73%, 71% and 68% aa identity with human, rat, bovine, porcine, canine and equine Nidogen-2, respectively.
References
- Kohfeldt, K. et al. (1998) J. Mol. Biol. 282:99.
- Schymeinsky, J. et al. (2002) Mol Cell Biol. 22: 6820.
- Miosge, N. et al. (2001) Histochem. J. 33:523.
- Salmivirta, K. et al. (2002) Exp. Cell Res. 279:188.
- Hohenester, E. and J. Engel (2002) Matrix Biol. 21:115.
- Charonis, A. et al. (2005) Curr. Med. Chem. 12:1495.
- Bader, B.L. et al. (2005) Mol. Cell. Biol. 25:6846.
- Fox, M.A. et al. (2008) Neural Dev. 3:24.
Alternate Names
Gene Symbol
UniProt
Additional Nidogen-2 Products
Product Specific Notices
This product is provided under an intellectual property license from Life Technologies Corporation. The transfer of this product is conditioned on the buyer using the purchased product solely in research conducted by the buyer, excluding contract research or any fee for service research, and the buyer must not (1) use this product or its components for (a) diagnostic, therapeutic or prophylactic purposes; (b) testing, analysis or screening services, or information in return for compensation on a per-test basis; or (c) manufacturing or quality assurance or quality control, and/or (2) sell or transfer this product or its components for resale, whether or not resold for use in research. For information on purchasing a license to this product for purposes other than as described above, contact Life Technologies Corporation, 5781 Van Allen Way, Carlsbad, CA 92008 USA or outlicensing@thermofisher.com.
For research use only