Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase small chain, chloroplastic (RBCS1), Recombinant Protein
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Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase small chain, chloroplastic (RBCS1), Recombinant Protein

Cat: RP16925
Size: 0.02 mg (E-Coli)/0.1 mg (E-Coli)/0.02 mg (Yeast)/0.1 mg (Yeast)/0.02 mg (Baculovirus)/1 mg (E-Coli)/0.02 mg (Mammalian-Cell)/0.1 mg (Baculovirus)/1 mg (Yeast)/0.1 mg (Mammalian-Cell)/1 mg (Baculovirus)/0.5 mg (Mammalian-Cell)
Species: Musa acuminata (Banana) (Musa cavendishii)
Datasheet:

Product Info

Full Product Name
Recombinant Musa acuminata Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase small chain, chloroplastic (RBCS1)
Product Gene Name
RBCS1 recombinant protein
Purity
Greater or equal to 85% purity as determined by SDS-PAGE. (lot specific)
Sequence
MKVWPIEGVK KFETLSYLPT MKDEALVKQI EYLLRSKWIP CLEFCPKGFV WRENHRSPGY YDGRYWTMWK LPMFGCTDAV QVAKEVEECK KEYPHAFIRI IGFDNNRQVQ CISFIAYKPT GY
Sequence Positions
59-180, Full length protein
Format
Lyophilized or liquid (Format to be determined during the manufacturing process)
Host
E Coli or Yeast or Baculovirus or Mammalian Cell
Molecular Weight
20,511 Da
Storage
Store at -20℃. For long-term storage, store at -20℃ or -80℃. Store working aliquots at 4℃ for up to one week. Repeated freezing and thawing is not recommended.
Protein Family
Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase

NCBI/Uniprot Data

NCBI Accession #
O24045.1
NCBI GI #
3914598
NCBI GeneID
103976659
NCBI Official Full Name
Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase small chain, chloroplastic
NCBI Official Symbol
LOC103976659
NCBI Official Synonym Symbols
rbcS1; rbcS-mc; rbcS-Ma1
NCBI Protein Information
ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase small chain, chloroplastic
UniProt Gene Name
RBCS1
UniProt Synonym Gene Names
RuBisCO small subuni
UniProt Protein Name
ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase small chain, chloroplastic
UniProt Primary Accession #
O24045
UniProt Related Accession #
O24045
UniProt Comments
RuBisCO catalyzes two reactions: the carboxylation of D-ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate, the primary event in carbon dioxide fixation, as well as the oxidative fragmentation of the pentose substrate. Both reactions occur simultaneously and in competition at the same active site.

For research use only, not for clinical use.