Hspa1a (NM_010479) Mouse Recombinant Protein
Product Specifications
Background
Molecular chaperone implicated in a wide variety of cellular processes, including protection of the proteome from stress, folding and transport of newly synthesized polypeptides, activation of proteolysis of misfolded proteins and the formation and dissociation of protein complexes. Plays a pivotal role in the protein quality control system, ensuring the correct folding of proteins, the re-folding of misfolded proteins and controlling the targeting of proteins for subsequent degradation. This is achieved through cycles of ATP binding, ATP hydrolysis and ADP release, mediated by co-chaperones. The co-chaperones have been shown to not only regulate different steps of the ATPase cycle, but they also have an individual specificity such that one co-chaperone may promote folding of a substrate while another may promote degradation. The affinity for polypeptides is regulated by its nucleotide bound state. In the ATP-bound form, it has a low affinity for substrate proteins. However, upon hydrolysis of the ATP to ADP, it undergoes a conformational change that increases its affinity for substrate proteins. It goes through repeated cycles of ATP hydrolysis and nucleotide exchange, which permits cycles of substrate binding and release. The co-chaperones are of three types: J-domain co-chaperones such as HSP40s (stimulate ATPase hydrolysis by HSP70), the nucleotide exchange factors (NEF) such as BAG1/2/3 (facilitate conversion of HSP70 from the ADP-bound to the ATP-bound state thereby promoting substrate release), and the TPR domain chaperones such as HOPX and STUB1. Maintains protein homeostasis during cellular stress through two opposing mechanisms: protein refolding and degradation. Its acetylation/deacetylation state determines whether it functions in protein refolding or protein degradation by controlling the competitive binding of co-chaperones HOPX and STUB1. During the early stress response, the acetylated form binds to HOPX which assists in chaperone-mediated protein refolding, thereafter, it is deacetylated and binds to ubiquitin ligase STUB1 that promotes ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation. Regulates centrosome integrity during mitosis, and is required for the maintenance of a functional mitotic centrosome that supports the assembly of a bipolar mitotic spindle. Enhances STUB1-mediated SMAD3 ubiquitination and degradation and facilitates STUB1-mediated inhibition of TGF-beta signaling. Essential for STUB1-mediated ubiquitination and degradation of FOXP3 in regulatory T-cells (Treg) during inflammation. Negatively regulates heat shock-induced HSF1 transcriptional activity during the attenuation and recovery phase period of the heat shock response.[UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot Function]
Synonyms
Hsp68; Hsp70-3; Hsp70.3; hsp70A1; Hsp72
Gene ID
193740
UniProt
Q61696, Q3TU85
Accession Number mRNA
NM_010479
Chromosomal Location
17 18.51 cM
Expression System
HEK293T
Tag
C-MYC/DDK
Concentration
>50 ug/mL as determined by microplate BCA method
Purity
> 80% as determined by SDS-PAGE and Coomassie blue staining
Form
Liquid
Buffer
25 mM Tris.HCl, pH 7.3, 100 mM glycine, 10% glycerol.
Molecular Weight
70.5 kDa
Storage Conditions
Stable for 1 year at -20°C or below from date of shipment. For maximum recovery of product, centrifuge the original vial after thawing and opening the cap. For long-term storage, aliquot and store at -20°C or below. Avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles.
Symbol
Hspa1a
Species
Mouse
Protein ID
NP_034609
Overview
Purified recombinant protein of Mouse heat shock protein 1A (Hspa1a), with C-terminal MYC/DDK tag, expressed in HEK293T cells, 20ug
Gene ID URL
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/193740
Uniprot URL
https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/Q61696
Accession Number mRNA URL
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nuccore/NM_010479
Protein ID Link
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nuccore/NP_034609
Curated Selection
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