Call Now

Human CD68 / Macrosialin / Gp110 Protein (aa 1-319, His Tag)

GP110,LAMP4,SCARD1

Catalog Number P11192-H08B1
Organism Species Human
Host Baculovirus-Insect Cells
Synonyms GP110,LAMP4,SCARD1
Molecular Weight The secreted recombinant human CD68 consists of 308 amino acids and predicts a molecular mass of 32.9 KDa. The apparent molecular mass of the protein is approximately 68 Kda in SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions due to glycosylation.
predicted N Asn 22
SDS-PAGE
Purity > 98 % as determined by SDS-PAGE
Protein Construction A DNA sequence encoding the human CD68 () was expressed, with a C-terminal polyhistidine tag.
Bio-activity
Research Area Immunology |Inflammation / Inflammatory Mediator |Cells Involved in Inflammation |Monocyte/Macrophage
Formulation Lyophilized from sterile 20mM Tris, 500mM NaCl, pH 7.4, 10% gly
1. Normally 5 % - 8 % trehalose, mannitol and 0.01% Tween80 are added as protectants before lyophilization. Specific concentrations are included in the hardcopy of COA.
Background Macrosialin, also known as CD68 and Gp110, is a single-pass type I  membrane protein which belongs to the LAMP family. CD68 is highly expressed by blood monocytes and tissue macrophages. It is also expressed in lymphocytes, fibroblasts and endothelial cells. CD68 is expressed in many tumor cell lines which could allow them to attach to selectins on vascular endothelium, facilitating their dissemination to secondary sites. CD68 plays a role in phagocytic activities of tissue macrophages, both in intracellular lysosomal metabolism and extracellular cell-cell and cell-pathogen interactions. It is a commonly used marker for macrophages. However, a number of studies have shown that CD68 antibodies react with other hematopoietic and non-hematopoietic cell types, suggesting that CD68 may not be a macrophage-specific antigen. CD68 binds to tissue- and organ-specific lectins or selectins, allowing homing of macrophage subsets to particular sites. Rapid recirculation of CD68 from endosomes and lysosomes to the plasma membrane may allow macrophages to crawl over selectin-bearing substrates or other cells.
Reference
  • Strobl H. et al., 1995, Br J Haematol. 90 (4): 774-82.
  • Ogawa Y. et al., 1995, Pathol Int. 45 (9): 698-701.
  • Sadovnikova E. et al., 2002,Leukemia. 16 (10): 2019-26.
  • Gottfried E. et al., 2008, Scand J Immunol. 67 (5): 453-63.
  • Strojnik T. et al., 2009, Anticancer Res. 29 (8): 3269-79.