
Product Uses Include
- Identification and characterization of cardiac actin binding proteins
- In vitro cardiac actin polymerization studies
Material:Bovine cardiac muscle actin is supplied as a lyophilized powder. When one vial is reconstituted in 1 ml of Actin Monomer Buffer: 5.0 mM Tris-HCI pH 8.0, 0.2 mM CaCl2, 0.2 mM ATP and 0.5 mM DTT, it is at a final concentration of 1.0 mg/ml.
Purity:Purity is determined by scanning densitometry of proteins on SDS-PAGE gels. Samples are > 99% pure.
Biological Activity:The biological activity is determined in three ways. The first method utilizes pyrene muscle actin as a fluorescent indicator of polymerization (use a 1:10 ratio of AP07 to AD99) . The second involves sedimentation of actin polymer by high speed centrifugation. The third method measures the integrity of the monomer by the specific inhibition of DNase activity. The biological activity is > 90%.
For product Datasheets and MSDSs please click on the PDF links below. For additional information, click on the FAQs tab above or contact our Technical Support department at tservice@cytoskeleton.com
For a guide to performing actin polymerizations with this actin product please click here.
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Seervai, Riyad N H et al. “The Huntingtin-interacting protein SETD2/HYPB is an actin lysine methyltransferase.” Science advances vol. 6,40 eabb7854. 2 Oct. 2020, doi:10.1126/sciadv.abb7854
Yang, Kai-Chien et al. “Deficiency of nuclear receptor interaction protein leads to cardiomyopathy by disrupting sarcomere structure and mitochondrial respiration.” Journal of molecular and cellular cardiology vol. 137 (2019): 9-24. doi:10.1016/j.yjmcc.2019.09.009
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Question 1: What is the isotype composition of the cardiac actin from bovine heart muscle?
Answer 1: Bovine cardiac actin (Cat. # AD99) is composed of 84% a-cardiac and 16% a-skeletal actin isoforms.
Question 2: How do I measure actin polymerization with the pyrene assay when there is no available pyrene conjugate for cardiac actin?
Answer 2: To examine the polymerization of unlabeled cardiac actin (Cat. # AD99), please click here for a polymerization protocol that uses an excess of the unlabeled [cardiac] actin plus 10% of pyrene-labeled skeletal muscle actin. The pyrene muscle actin will not polymerize on its own at the concentration used in this assay, so the reaction is dependent on unlabeled cardiac actin (Cat. # AD99) for F-actin formation. In this way, the pyrene-labeled muscle actin is taken up and polymerized to serve as a reporter for polymerization of the unlabeled actin that is present at a much greater concentration.
If you have any questions concerning this product, please contact our Technical Service department at tservice@cytoskeleton.com