PKC beta I dNPS
(Plasmid
#16379)
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Depositing Lab
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Publication
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Sequence Information
Full plasmid sequence is not available for this item.
Ordering
Item | Catalog # | Description | Quantity | Price (USD) | |
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Plasmid | 16379 | Standard format: Plasmid sent in bacteria as agar stab | 1 | $85 |
Backbone
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Vector backbonepHACE
- Backbone size w/o insert (bp) 5400
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Vector typeMammalian Expression
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Selectable markersNeomycin (select with G418)
Growth in Bacteria
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Bacterial Resistance(s)Ampicillin, 100 μg/mL
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Growth Temperature37°C
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Growth Strain(s)DH5alpha
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Copy numberHigh Copy
Gene/Insert
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Gene/Insert namePKC beta 1
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SpeciesR. norvegicus (rat)
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Insert Size (bp)1923
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MutationN-terminal pseudosubstrate domain deletion: aa 30-671
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Entrez GenePrkcb (a.k.a. Pkcb, Prkcb1)
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Tag
/ Fusion Protein
- HA (C terminal on backbone)
Cloning Information
- Cloning method Restriction Enzyme
- 5′ cloning site EcoRI (not destroyed)
- 3′ cloning site EcoRI (not destroyed)
- 5′ sequencing primer CMV-F (Common Sequencing Primers)
Resource Information
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Addgene Notes
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Articles Citing this Plasmid
Terms and Licenses
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Academic/Nonprofit Terms
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Industry Terms
- Not Available to Industry
Trademarks:
- Zeocin® is an InvivoGen trademark.
Depositor Comments
From user-provided sequence (see 'Reviews'), there are five amino acid differences from one of two NCBI reference sequences (AAA41868.1 and NP_001165776.1): 25A, 62F, 64K, 69C, and 294G. These "mutations" are also present in human, bovine, and xenopus sequences. An additional C-terminal mutation, H579Y, is present. These mutations are not believed to affect function.
These plasmids were created by your colleagues. Please acknowledge the Principal Investigator, cite the article in which the plasmids were described, and include Addgene in the Materials and Methods of your future publications.
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For your Materials & Methods section:
PKC beta I dNPS was a gift from Bernard Weinstein (Addgene plasmid # 16379 ; http://n2t.net/addgene:16379 ; RRID:Addgene_16379) -
For your References section:
Roles of specific isoforms of protein kinase C in the transcriptional control of cyclin D1 and related genes. Soh JW, Weinstein IB. J Biol Chem. 2003 Sep 5. 278(36):34709-16. 10.1074/jbc.M302016200 PubMed 12794082