Apoptosis is a cell death process that removes toxic and/or useless cells during mammalian development. The apoptotic process is accompanied by shrinkage and fragmentation of the cells and nuclei and degradation of the chromosomal DNA into nucleosomal units. DNA fragmentation factor (DFF) is a heterodimeric protein of 40-kD (DFFB) and 45-kD (DFFA) subunits. DFFA is the substrate for caspase-3 and triggers DNA fragmentation during apoptosis. DFF becomes activated when DFFA is cleaved by caspase-3. The cleaved fragments of DFFA dissociate from DFFB, the active component of DFF. DFFB has been found to trigger both DNA fragmentation and chromatin condensation during apoptosis. Alternatively spliced transcript variants encoding distinct isoforms have been found for this gene but the biological validity of these variants has not been determined. [provided by RefSeq, Jul 2008].
custom-made
DFFB
Spezies: Human
Wirt: HEK-293 Cells
Recombinant
> 90 % as determined by Bis-Tris PAGE, anti-tag ELISA, Western Blot and analytical SEC (HPLC)
custom-made
DFFB
Spezies: Maus
Wirt: HEK-293 Cells
Recombinant
> 90 % as determined by Bis-Tris PAGE, anti-tag ELISA, Western Blot and analytical SEC (HPLC)
custom-made
DFFB
Spezies: Maus
Wirt: Cell-free protein synthesis (CFPS)
Recombinant
approximately 70-80 % as determined by SDS PAGE, Western Blot and analytical SEC (HPLC).
WB, ELISA, SDS
custom-made
DFFB
Spezies: Human
Wirt: Cell-free protein synthesis (CFPS)
Recombinant
approximately 70-80 % as determined by SDS PAGE, Western Blot and analytical SEC (HPLC).
WB, ELISA, SDS