Enterokinase (Animal Free)
Proteases (also called Proteolytic Enzymes, Peptidases, or Proteinases) are enzymes that hydrolyze the amide bonds within proteins or peptides. Most proteases act in a specific manner, hydrolyzing bonds at, or adjacent to, specific residues, or a specific sequence of residues contained within the substrate protein or peptide. Proteases play an important role in most diseases and biological processes, including prenatal and postnatal development, reproduction, signal transduction, the immune response, various autoimmune and degenerative diseases, and cancer. They are also an important research tool, frequently used in the analysis and production of proteins. Enterokinase sequentially cleaves carboxyl side of D-D-D-D-K. Human Enterokinase is expressed as a linear 1019 amino acid polypeptide precursor glycoprotein. Proteolytic processing of this precursor generates the biologically active form of Enterokinase, which consists of two polypeptide chains (heavy chain and light chain) held together by a single disulfide bond, resulting in formation of a biologically active heterodimer. The heavy chain consists of 784 amino acid residues, and the light chain consists of 235 amino acid residues. The calculated molecular weight of Recombinant Human Enterokinase is 108.7 kDa.
Product Specifications
Synonyms
Enteropeptidase, Serine protease 7
NCBI Gene ID
5651
UniProt
P98073
Accession Number
NP_002763.2
Accession Number mRNA
NM_002772.2
Chromosomal Location
21q21.1
Reactivity
Human
Cross Reactivity
Human
Sequence
Endotoxin
< 0.02 ng/µg of protein (< 0.2 EU/µg)
Purity
≥ 90% by SDS-PAGE gel and HPLC analyses.
Bioactivity
Sequentially cleaves carboxyl side of D-D-D-D-K.
Length
784/235
Form
Lyophilized
Molecular Weight
108.7 kDa
Host or Source
CHO cells
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