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Anti-Ninein Antibody, clone 79-160-7 is an antibody against Ninein for use in WB & IP.
More>>Anti-Ninein Antibody, clone 79-160-7 is an antibody against Ninein for use in WB & IP. Less<<
Anti-Ninein Antibody, clone 79-160-7: SDB (Sicherheitsdatenblätter), Analysenzertifikate und Qualitätszertifikate, Dossiers, Broschüren und andere verfügbare Dokumente.
Glycogen synthase kinase 3 beta-interacting protein
ninein centrosomal protein
GSK3B-interacting protein
Background Information
Ninein is a coiled-coil, centrosomal protein that is a necessary component in microtubule minus-end anchorage and positioning, and may have a role as a maturation factor for centrosomes. It may also be involved in microtubule nucleation. More recent studies have identified ninein as a crucial component in the formation of blood vessels. Expression of ninein is ubiquitous, but significantly higher levels have been observed in skeletal muscle and heart tissue. There have been 8 isoforms characterized due to alternative splicing.
References
Product Information
Format
Purified
Control
Hek293 cell lysate
Presentation
Purified mouse monoclonal IgG2aκ in buffer containing 0.1 M Tris-Glycine, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl with 0.05% sodium azide.
This gene encodes one of the proteins important for centrosomal function. This protein is important for positioning and anchoring the microtubules minus-ends in epithelial cells. Localization of this protein to the centrosome requires three leucine zippers in the central coiled-coil domain. Multiple alternatively spliced transcript variants that encode different isoforms have been reported. [provided by RefSeq].
FUNCTION: Centrosomal protein required in the positioning and anchorage of the microtubule minus-end in epithelial cells. May also act as a centrosome maturation factor. May play a role in microtubule nucleation. Overexpression does not perturb nucleation or elongation of microtubules but suppresses release of microtubules.
SUBUNIT STRUCTURE: Homooligomer. Interacts with GSK3B (GSK3-beta) via its C-terminus domain. Interacts with C14ORF166, such interaction may prevent its phosphorylation by GSK3-beta.
SUBCELLULAR LOCATION: Cytoplasm › cytoskeleton › centrosome. Note: Component of the core centrosome. Arranged in a tubular conformation with an open and a closed end within the centrosome. In the mother centrosome, it localizes at both ends of the centrosome tube, including the site of centrosome duplication, while in the daughter centrosome it is present only at the closed end. Requires PCM1 for centrosome localization.
TISSUE SPECIFICITY: Ubiquitous. Highly expressed in heart and skeletal muscle. Isoform 1 is more expressed than isoform 5.
DEVELOPMENTAL STAGE: In interphase cells, it is localized in the centrosome. Decreases in metaphase and anaphase and reappears in telophase.
DOMAIN: The coiled coil region from Asn-1611 to Pro-1693 is necessary and sufficient for the targeting to centrosome.
PTM: Phosphorylated by Aurora A (AIK) and PKA kinases but not CK2 or Aurora B (AIM). Phosphorylated upon DNA damage, probably by ATM or ATR.
MISCELLANEOUS: Antibodies against NIN are present in sera from patients with autoimmune diseases that developed autoantibodies against centrosomal proteins.
SEQUENCE CAUTION: The sequence AAH65521.1 differs from that shown. Reason: Miscellaneous discrepancy. Contaminating sequence. Potential poly-A sequence.
The sequence BAB13391.2 differs from that shown. Reason: Erroneous initiation.
The sequence BAB15640.1 differs from that shown. Reason: Erroneous initiation.
Molecular Weight
~ 250 kDa observed MW. An unidentified nonspecific band appears at ~ 50 kDa.
Physicochemical Information
Dimensions
Materials Information
Toxicological Information
Safety Information according to GHS
Safety Information
Product Usage Statements
Quality Assurance
Evaluated by Western Blot in Hek293 cell lysate.
Western Blot Analysis: 1 µg/mL of the antibody detected Ninein in 10 µg of Hek293 cell lysate.
Usage Statement
Unless otherwise stated in our catalog or other company documentation accompanying the product(s), our products are intended for research use only and are not to be used for any other purpose, which includes but is not limited to, unauthorized commercial uses, in vitro diagnostic uses, ex vivo or in vivo therapeutic uses or any type of consumption or application to humans or animals.
Ninein is expressed in the cytoplasm of angiogenic tip-cells and regulates tubular morphogenesis of endothelial cells. Matsumoto, Taro, et al. Arterioscler. Thromb. Vasc. Biol., 28: 2123-30 (2008)
2008
OBJECTIVE: Angiogenesis is an integral part of many physiological processes but may also aggravate pathological conditions such as cancer. Development of effective angiogenesis inhibitors requires a thorough understanding of the molecular mechanisms regulating vessel formation. The aim of this project was to identify proteins that regulate tubular morphogenesis of endothelial cells. METHODS AND RESULTS: Phosphotyrosine-dependent affinity-purification and mass spectrometry showed tyrosine phosphorylation of ninein during tubular morphogenesis of endothelial cells. Ninein was recently identified as a centrosomal microtubule-anchoring protein. Our results show that ninein is localized in the cytoplasm in endothelial cells, and that it is highly expressed in the vasculature in normal and pathological human tissues. Using embryoid bodies as a model of vascular development, we found that ninein is abundantly expressed in the cytoplasm of endothelial cells during sprouting angiogenesis, in particular in the sprouting tip-cell. In accordance, siRNA-dependent silencing of ninein in endothelial cells inhibited tubular morphogenesis. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, we show that ninein is expressed in developing vessels and in endothelial tip cells, and that ninein is critical for formation of the vascular tube. These data strongly implicate ninein as an important new regulator of angiogenesis.
Cell-to-cell contact and polarisation of epithelial cells involve a major reorganisation of the microtubules and centrosomal components. The radial microtubule organisation is lost and an apico-basal array develops that is no longer anchored at the centrosome. This involves not only the relocation of microtubules but also of centrosomal anchoring proteins to apical non-centrosomal sites. The relocation of microtubule minus-end-anchoring proteins such as ninein to the apical sites is likely to be essential for the assembly and stabilisation of the apico-basal arrays in polarised epithelial cells. In this study, we establish that ninein is highly dynamic and that, in epithelial cells, it is present not only at the centrosome but also in the cytoplasm as distinct speckles. Live-cell imaging reveals that GFP-ninein speckles are released from the centrosome and move in a microtubule-dependent manner within the cytoplasm and thus establishes that epithelial cells possess the mechanical means for relocation of ninein to non-centrosomal anchoring sites. We also provide evidence for the deployment of ninein speckles to apical anchoring sites during epithelial differentiation in both an in situ tissue and an in vitro culture system. In addition, the findings suggest that the non-centrosomal microtubule anchoring sites associate with adherens junctions in polarised epithelial cells.
Primary cilia (PC) function as microtubule-based sensory antennae projecting from the surface of many eukaryotic cells. They play important roles in mechano- and chemosensory perception and their dysfunction is implicated in developmental disorders and severe diseases. The basal body that functions in PC assembly is derived from the mature centriole, a component of the centrosome. Through a small interfering RNA screen we found several centrosomal proteins (Ceps) to be involved in PC formation. One newly identified protein, Cep164, was indispensable for PC formation and hence characterized in detail. By immunogold electron microscopy, Cep164 could be localized to the distal appendages of mature centrioles. In contrast to ninein and Cep170, two components of subdistal appendages, Cep164 persisted at centrioles throughout mitosis. Moreover, the localizations of Cep164 and ninein/Cep170 were mutually independent during interphase. These data implicate distal appendages in PC formation and identify Cep164 as an excellent marker for these structures.
Microtubule nucleation and anchoring at the centrosome are independent processes linked by ninein function. Delgehyr, Nathalie, et al. J. Cell. Sci., 118: 1565-75 (2005)
2004
The centrosome organizes microtubules by controlling nucleation and anchoring processes. In mammalian cells, subdistal appendages of the mother centriole are major microtubule-anchoring structures of the centrosome. It is not known how newly nucleated microtubules are anchored to these appendages. We show here that ninein, a component of subdistal appendages, localizes to the centriole via its C-terminus and interacts with gamma-tubulin-containing complexes via its N-terminus. Expression of a construct encoding the ninein C-terminus displaced endogenous ninein and the gamma-tubulin ring complex (gamma-TuRC) from the centrosome, leading to microtubule nucleation and anchoring defects. By contrast, expression of a fusion consisting of the N- and C-terminal domains (lacking the central coiled-coil region) displaced endogenous ninein without perturbing gamma-TuRC localization. Accordingly, only anchoring defects were observed in this case. Therefore, expression of this fusion appeared to uncouple microtubule nucleation and anchorage activities at the centrosome. Our results suggest that ninein has a role not only in microtubule anchoring but also in promoting microtubule nucleation by docking the gamma-TuRC at the centrosome. In addition, we show that the gamma-TuRC might not be sufficient to anchor microtubules at the centrosome in the absence of ninein. We therefore propose that ninein constitutes a molecular link between microtubule-nucleation and -anchoring activities at the centrosome.