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BirA Protein, E. coli, Recombinant (His & MBP)

BirA Protein, E. coli, Recombinant (His & MBP)

Catalog Number: orb1956064

DispatchUsually dispatched within 5-10 working days
$ 490.00
Catalog Numberorb1956064
CategoryProteins
DescriptionThe enzyme BirA is a key reagent because of its ability to biotinylate proteins at a specific residue in a recognition sequence. This enzyme is used to biotinylate the C termini of membrane proteins, allowing these proteins to be tetramerized by binding to streptavidin. Because of the specificity of the biotinylation at the C terminus, the orientation of the membrane proteins on the streptavidin is equivalent to that of the native protein on the cell surface. These tetrameric proteins can be used to study protein receptor-ligand interactions at the cell surface, and site-specific biotinylation can be used to study proteins in vitro using a defined orientation. The biotinylation of histones by BirA ligase is consistent with the proposed role of human HCS in chromatin. The N-terminal BirA domain is required for both transcriptional regulation of biotin synthesis and biotin protein ligase activity.
TagHis, MBP
Purity94.80%
MW78.3 kDa (predicted); 64-68 kDa (reducing conditions)
UniProt IDP06709
Expression SystemE. coli
Biological OriginE. coli
Biological ActivityThe enzyme BirA is a key reagent because of its ability to biotinylate proteins at a specific residue in a recognition sequence. This enzyme is used to biotinylate the C termini of membrane proteins, allowing these proteins to be tetramerized by binding to streptavidin. Because of the specificity of the biotinylation at the C terminus, the orientation of the membrane proteins on the streptavidin is equivalent to that of the native protein on the cell surface. These tetrameric proteins can be used to study protein receptor-ligand interactions at the cell surface, and site-specific biotinylation can be used to study proteins in vitro using a defined orientation. The biotinylation of histones by BirA ligase is consistent with the proposed role of human HCS in chromatin. The N-terminal BirA domain is required for both transcriptional regulation of biotin synthesis and biotin protein ligase activity.
Expression RegionA DNA sequence encoding the E.coil BirA (P06709) (Met1–Lys321) was fused with an N-terminal polyhistidine-tagged MBP tag at the N-terminus. Predicted N terminal: Met
Storage-20°C
NoteFor research use only
Application notesA Certificate of Analysis (CoA) containing reconstitution instructions is included with the products. Please refer to the CoA for detailed information.
Expiration Date6 months from date of receipt.