Product Datasheet
RIM 2 Antibody
Catalog Number: 48334
Technical:tech@swbio.com
Information:info@swbio.com
Description
- Swiss-Prot No.:
- Swiss-Prot#:Q9UQ26
- Form of Antibody:
- 1*TBS (pH7.4), 1%BSA, 40%Glycerol. Preservative: 0.05% Sodium Azide.
- appl_detail:
- WB: 1:100-1:1,000
IHC: 1:50-500
IP: 1-2 μg per 100-500 μg of total protein(1 ml of cell lysate)
- other_names:
- KIAA0751 antibody Non small cell lung cancer RimL3a protein antibody Non small cell lung cancer RimL3c protein antibody OBOE antibody Protein regulating synaptic membrane exocytosis 2 antibody Rab-3-interacting molecule 2 antibody Rab-3-interacting protein 3 antibody Rab3 interacting molecule 2 antibody RAB3IP3 antibody Regulating synaptic membrane exocytosis 2 antibody Regulating synaptic membrane exocytosis protein 2 antibody RIM 2 antibody Rims2 (gene name) antibody Rims2 antibody RIMS2_HUMAN antibody
- Purification:
- ProA affinity purified
- Background:
- Rab3, a neural/neuroendocrine-specific member of the Rab family, is involved in Ca2+-regulated exocytosis. Rab3 functions in an inhibitory capacity by controlling the recruitment of secretory vesicles into a releasable pool at the plasma membrane. Rim (rab3 interacting molecule), a putative effector protein for Rab3s, is composed of an N-terminal zinc-finger motif and C-terminal PDZ and C2 domains. Rim exists as two variants, Rim1 and Rim2, produced by alternative splicing. The 3-end of the Rim2 gene produces an independent mRNA that encodes a smaller protein referred to as Nim2, which like Rim, also regulates exocytosis. Rim serves as a Rab3-dependent regulator of synaptic-vesicle fusion by forming a GTP-dependent complex between synaptic plasma membranes and docked synaptic vesicles. Both Rim1 and Rim2 can bind to cAMP-GEFII, which is a direct target of cAMP in regulated exocytosis and is responsible for cAMP-dependent, PKA-dependent exocytosis. Rim also localizes on the plasma membrane of INS-1E cells and pancreatic beta-cells. Rab3 binding domain of Rim enhances glucose-stimulated secretion in intact cells and Ca2+-stimulated exocytosis in permeabilized cells, suggesting that Rim may also play a regulatory role in insulin secretion.
© Signalway Biotechnology All Rights Reserved.