Anti-Yaba Monkey Tumor Virus YMTVg143R Monoclonal Antibody (MP-K2868) (Mouse IgG)(MPYF-1222-KX1402)
The antibody customized production platform is used to screen the mouse monoclonal antibodies with at least 5 synthetic peptides of Yaba Monkey Tumor Virus YMTVg143R. The mAb with highest affinity will be selected. The selected antibody recognizes Yaba Monkey Tumor Virus YMTVg143R. The isotype is Mouse IgG. It can be used in applications: WB (Other applications need to be tested.).
Product Description
Species Reactivity
Yaba Monkey Tumor Virus
Cross Reactivity
YMTVg143R
Specificity
This antibody recognizes Yaba Monkey Tumor Virus YMTVg143R.
Antibody Isotype
Mouse IgG
Clonality
Monoclonal Antibody
Purification
Purified by Protein A/G chromatography.
Applications
WB (Other applications need to be tested.)
Storage
Store at 4°C for short term (1 week), store at -20°C to -80°C for long term (1 year). Avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles.
Target
Introduction
The Yaba monkey tumor virus is a type of DNA poxvirus belonging to the genus Yatapoxvirus. It was first found in a colony of rhesus monkeys in Yaba, Lagos, Nigeria in 1956. While many poxviruses are host specific, the YMTV can not only infect and cause cutaneous nodules in primates, including rhesus monkeys, baboons, and cynomolgus monkeys, but also infect humans and cause mild and localized skin disease.
Alternative Names
YMTVg143R; N1R/p28-like protein; similar to the Shope fibroma virus N1R/DNA-binding protein; contains a KilA-N domain (conserved DNA-binding domain) that is found in a wide range of proteins of large bacterial and eukaryotic DNA viruses; The poxviridae are enveloped unsegmented dsDNA viruses; unlike many dsDNA viruses that replicate in the host nucleus poxviruses encode their own replication machinery and therefore replicate in the cytoplasm; viral genes are expressed in a bi-phasic manner with early genes encoding non-structural proteins involved in genome replication and late genes encoding the viral structural proteins
Official Symbol
N1R/p28-like protein