CCM-1
Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCM) are frequent vascular abnormalities caused by mutations in one of the CCM genes. CCM-1 (also known as KRIT1) stabilizes endothelial junctions and is essential for vascular morphogenesis in mouse embryos. However, cellular functions of CCM-1 during the early steps of the CCM pathogenesis remain unknown. It was shown that CCM-1 represents an antiangiogenic protein to keep the human endothelium quiescent. CCM-1 inhibits endothelial proliferation, apoptosis, migration, lumen formation, and sprouting angiogenesis in primary human endothelial cells. CCM-1 strongly induces DLL4-NOTCH signaling, which promotes AKT phosphorylation but reduces phosphorylation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase ERK. Consistently, blocking of NOTCH activity alleviates CCM-1 effects. ERK phosphorylation is increased in human CCM lesions. Transplantation of CCM-1-silenced human endothelial cells into SCID mice recapitulates hallmarks of the CCM pathology and serves as a unique CCM model system.
Product Specifications
Synonyms
CCM-1; Cerebral cavernous malformations protein 1; KRIT1; KRIT1, ankyrin repeat containing; CAM
NCBI Gene ID
889
UniProt
O00522
Accession Number
NP_004903.2
Accession Number mRNA
NM_004912,3
Chromosomal Location
7q21.2
Reactivity
Anti-Human
Cross Reactivity
Human
Target Antigen
Recombinant human CCM1 (RT #300-054)
Clone
Rabbit IgG
Applications
WB, IF
Purification Method
Protein A purified
Assay Protocol
Centrifuge vial prior to opening. Reconstitute in sterile water to a concentration of 0.1-1.0 mg/ml.
Bioactivity
Western Blot: Use 1-5 µg/ml
Form
Lyophilized
Buffer
0.5X PBS, pH 7.2
Reconstitution
Water
Storage Conditions
Host or Source
Rabbit
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