P16-INK4a-TAT
P16-INK4a is a nuclear protein that regulates the cell cycle by inhibiting cyclin dependent kinase-4 (CDK4) and CDK6. p16-INK4a inhibits CDK activity by binding to the CDK molecules in a manner that interferes with their ability to interact with cyclin D. This activity has the effect of suppressing tumor formation and growth, and of inducing replicative senescence in various normal cells, including stem cells. The expression of p16-INK4a steadily increases with age and tends to accumulate in stem cell compartments. The deletion, rearrangement, or mutation of the p16-INK4a gene is frequently found in melanomas as well as in certain other types of cancer. P16-INK4a and other transcription factors have been introduced into cells by DNA transfection, viral infection, or microinjection. Protein transduction using TAT fusion proteins represents an alternative methodology for introducing transcription factors and other nuclear proteins into primary as well as transformed cells. Recombinant human p16-INK4a-TAT expressed in E. coli is a 18 kDa protein containing 167 amino-acid residues, including the 156 residues of full-length p16-INK4a and a 12-residue C-terminal TAT peptide (GYGRKKRRQRRR) .
Product Specifications
Synonyms
Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 2A, Cyclin-dependent kinase 4 inhibitor A, CDK4I, MTS-1, Multiple tumor suppressor 2
NCBI Gene ID
1029
UniProt
P42771
Accession Number
NP_478104.2
Accession Number mRNA
NM_058197.4
Chromosomal Location
9p21
Reactivity
Human
Cross Reactivity
Human
Label
TAT-Fusionprotein
Sequence
Endotoxin
< 0.1 ng/µg of protein (< 1EU/µg)
Purity
> 95% by SDS-PAGE & HPLC analyses
Bioactivity
Data not available.
Length
167
Form
Lyophilized
Molecular Weight
18 kDa
Host or Source
E. coli
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