| Description | MCE Anti-Flag Magnetic Beads are used for immunoprecipitation (IP) of specific Flag-tagged (DYKDDDDK) proteins expressed in bacterial and mammalian cells and in vitro expression systems, and also suitable for Co-immunoprecipitation and purification of Flag-tagged protein. The 1 mL is defined as the MCE Anti-Flag Magnetic Beads are used for immunoprecipitation (IP) of specific Flag-tagged (DYKDDDDK) proteins expressed in bacterial and mammalian cells and in vitro expression systems, and also suitable for Co-immunoprecipitation and purification of Flag-tagged protein. The 1 mL is defined as the base specification. All larger sizes correspond to incremental volumes of this base... Read More | β-CGRP, human (Human β-CGRP) is one of calcitonin peptides, acts via the complex of calcitonin-receptor-like receptor (CRLR) and receptor-activity-modifying protein (RAMP), with IC50s of 1 nM and 300 nM for CRLR/RAMP1 and CRLR/RAMP2 in cells[1] | Dapiglutide (ZP7570) is a long-acting glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor 1R (GLP-1R)/Glucagon-like peptide-2 receptor (GLP-2R) dual agonist. Dapiglutide alleviates intestinal dysfunction in a mouse short bowel model and has anti-obesity effects[1][2][3] | Mutanolysin is a biochemical reagent that can be used as a biological material or organic compound for life science related research | Wasabi Receptor Toxin TFA (WaTx TFA) is the TFA salt form of Wasabi Receptor Toxin (HY-P5914). Wasabi Receptor Toxin TFA is a cell-penetrating scorpion toxin. Wasabi Receptor Toxin TFA is the activator for TRPA1 ion channel with EC50 in nanomolar level, and prolongs the channel open time, but Wasabi Receptor Toxin TFA (WaTx TFA) is the TFA salt form of Wasabi Receptor Toxin (HY-P5914). Wasabi Receptor Toxin TFA is a cell-penetrating scorpion toxin. Wasabi Receptor Toxin TFA is the activator for TRPA1 ion channel with EC50 in nanomolar level, and prolongs the channel open time, but reduces Ca2+ permeability. Wasabi Receptor Toxin TFA causes thermal hypersensitivity and mechanical allodynia in rats, without triggering neurogenic inflammation[1]... Read More |