Prostate Specific Antigen (KLK3) (NM_001648) Human Tagged ORF Clone Lentiviral Particle
CAT#: RC202740L4V
- LentiORF®
Lenti ORF particles, KLK3 (mGFP-tagged) - Human kallikrein-related peptidase 3 (KLK3), transcript variant 1, 200ul, >10^7 TU/mL
Lentiviral Particles: DDK DDK w/ Puro mGFP
AAV Particle: DDK
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Specifications
Product Data | |
Type | Human Tagged ORF Clone Lentiviral Particle |
Tag | mGFP |
Symbol | Prostate Specific Antigen |
Synonyms | APS; hK3; KLK2A1; PSA |
Mammalian Cell Selection | Puromycin |
Vector | pLenti-C-mGFP-P2A-Puro |
ACCN | NM_001648 |
ORF Size | 783 bp |
Sequence Data |
The ORF insert of this clone is exactly the same as(RC202740).
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OTI Disclaimer | The molecular sequence of this clone aligns with the gene accession number as a point of reference only. However, individual transcript sequences of the same gene can differ through naturally occurring variations (e.g. polymorphisms), each with its own valid existence. This clone is substantially in agreement with the reference, but a complete review of all prevailing variants is recommended prior to use. More info |
OTI Annotation | This clone was engineered to express the complete ORF with an expression tag. Expression varies depending on the nature of the gene. |
Reference Data | |
RefSeq | NM_001648.2, NP_001639.1 |
RefSeq Size | 1464 bp |
RefSeq ORF | 786 bp |
Locus ID | 354 |
UniProt ID | P07288 |
Cytogenetics | 19q13.33 |
Domains | Tryp_SPc |
Protein Families | Druggable Genome, Protease, Secreted Protein |
Protein Pathways | Pathways in cancer, Prostate cancer |
MW | 28.7 kDa |
Gene Summary | Kallikreins are a subgroup of serine proteases having diverse physiological functions. Growing evidence suggests that many kallikreins are implicated in carcinogenesis and some have potential as novel cancer and other disease biomarkers. The gene is one of the fifteen kallikrein subfamily members located in a cluster on chromosome 19. It encodes a single-chain glycoprotein, a protease which is synthesized in the epithelial cells of the prostate gland, and is present in seminal plasma. It is thought to function normally in the liquefaction of seminal coagulum, presumably by hydrolysis of the high molecular mass seminal vesicle protein. The serum level of this protein, called PSA in the clinical setting, is useful in the diagnosis and monitoring of prostatic carcinoma. Alternate splicing of this gene generates several transcript variants encoding different isoforms. [provided by RefSeq, Dec 2019] |
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