Resina EK-Away™
Product Image
Invitrogen™

Resina EK-Away™

La resina EK-Away™ está diseñada específicamente para la eliminación de EKMax™ u otras enzimas de enteroquinasa después de la escisiónMás información
Have Questions?
Número de catálogoCantidad
R180017,5 mL
Número de catálogo R18001
Precio (CLP)
861.275
Each
Añadir al carro de la compra
Cantidad:
7,5 mL
Precio (CLP)
861.275
Each
Añadir al carro de la compra
La resina EK-Away™ está diseñada específicamente para la eliminación de EKMax™ u otras enzimas de enteroquinasa después de la escisión de proteínas que contienen el sitio de escisión de la enteroquinasa (Figura 1). La resina se conjuga con el inhibidor de tripsina de soja, que tiene una gran afinidad y capacidad de unión con la enteroquinasa. El sitio catalítico de la enzima se une a esta resina basada en agarosa para una sencilla eliminación por lotes o en columna de EKMax™ u otras preparaciones de enteroquinasa.
Para uso exclusivo en investigación. No apto para uso en procedimientos diagnósticos.
Especificaciones
Tipo de columnaAfinidad
Cantidad7,5 mL
Fase estacionariaEnteroquinasa
FormularioSuspensión líquida
Línea de productosEK-Away
TipoResina
Unit SizeEach
Contenido y almacenamiento
EK-Away™ se suministra como pulpa de etanol al 50 % y debe almacenarse a +4 °C. Se incluyen tampones de unión 10X y de limpieza 10X. 7,5 ml de resina eliminan 250 unidades de enteroquinasa; 30 ml eliminan 1000 unidades de EKMax™. Se garantiza la estabilidad de todos los reactivos durante 6 meses si se almacenan adecuadamente.

Preguntas frecuentes

What is the molecular weight of the EKMax enterokinase enzyme?

EKMax enterokinase is a clone of the catalytic subunit of enterokinase expressed in the yeast Pichia pastoris. The calculated molecular weight of the protein is 26.3 kDa, but it contains three sites for asparagine-linked glycosylation. The apparent molecular weight of 43 kDa is consistent with previous observations (LaVallie et al., 1993) and is assumed to be because of N-linked glycosylation.
Reference: LaVallie, E.R., Rehemtulla, A., Racie, L.A.,Diblasio, E.A., Ferenz, C., Grant, K.L. Light, A., and McCoy, J.M. (1993). Cloning and functional expression of a cDNA encoding the catalytic subunit of bovine enterokinase. J.Biol.Chem. 268, 23311-23317.

Will DTT, Triton X-100 detergent, Tween 20 detergent, Thesit, calcium chloride, sodium chloride, or SDS affect the efficiency of Enterokinase (EKMax) enzyme cleavage?

Enterokinase is active in buffers containing up to 1 mM DTT, 0.1% Triton X-100 detergent, 0.1% Tween 20 detergent, and 0.1% Thesit. It is recommended to have 10mM Tris pH 8.0 and 10 mM calcium chloride in the buffer. Enterokinase is inhibited by sodium chloride and SDS.

Should Enterokinase be resuspended in a buffer containing 50% glycerol to protect the protein from freeze/thaw cycles?

Freeze thaw has a minimal effect on the activity of Enterokinase. The addition of glycerol is not necessary but can make handling of the enzyme easier.

How specific is cleavage by EKMax Enterokinase? Are there any alternate cleavage sites for the enzyme?

Enterokinase cleaves after the sequence (Asp)4-Lys.

It has been proposed that the active center of enterokinase possesses a distinctive cationic subsite that binds -(Asp)4. Enterokinase is highly specific and tolerates very few changes to its recognition site. If the ionic charge of the recognition site is preserved, enterokinase will recognize the site, but the rate of hydrolysis of the peptide bond will be reduced (Light and Janska, 1989). The four aspartyl residues act as a signal for enterokinase cleavage. It has been reported that with only three aspartyl residues the rate of hydrolysis is reduced. Two aspartyl residues preceding the lysyl residue are the minimum number of acidic residues needed to maintain specificity (Maroux et al., 1971). Non-specific cleavage by enterokinase may occur in the cases described above, but this is usually alleviated by reducing the amount of enzyme used.

Citations & References (1)

Citations & References
Abstract
Initiation of hepatitis delta virus genome replication
Authors:Dingle K, Bichko V, Zuccola H, Hogle J, Taylor J
Journal:J Virol
PubMed ID:9573243
The small, 195-amino-acid form of the hepatitis delta virus (HDV) antigen (deltaAg-S) is essential for genome replication, i.e., for the transcription, processing, and accumulation of HDV RNAs. To better understand this requirement, we used purified recombinant deltaAg-S and HDV RNA synthesized in vitro to assemble high-molecular-weight ribonucleoprotein (RNP) structures. After ... More