Products
Research Areas
COVID-19
Resources
Login
Quick Order
Cart
Login
Registration enables users to use special features of this website, such as past
order histories, retained contact details for faster checkout, review submissions, and special promotions.


Fields marked with a * are required.

Login
Quick Order
Contact Us

Locations


Orders Processing,
Shipping & Receiving,
Warehouse

2 Shaker Rd Suites
B001/B101
Shirley, MA 01464


Production Lab

Floor 6, Suite 620
20700 44th Avenue W
Lynnwood, WA 98036

Telephone Numbers



Tel: +1 (206) 374-1102
Fax: +1 (206) 577-4565

Contact Us



Additional Contact Details

Login
Registration enables users to use special features of this website, such as past
order histories, retained contact details for faster checkout, review submissions, and special promotions.


Fields marked with a * are required.

Login
Quick Order

CRYGA

Crystallin, Gamma A

Crystallins are separated into two classes: taxon-specific, or enzyme, and ubiquitous. The latter class constitutes the major proteins of vertebrate eye lens and maintains the transparency and refractive index of the lens. Since lens central fiber cells lose their nuclei during development, these crystallins are made and then retained throughout life, making them extremely stable proteins. Mammalian lens crystallins are divided into alpha, beta, and gamma families; beta and gamma crystallins are also considered as a superfamily. Alpha and beta families are further divided into acidic and basic groups. Seven protein regions exist in crystallins: four homologous motifs, a connecting peptide, and N- and C-terminal extensions. Gamma-crystallins are a homogeneous group of highly symmetrical, monomeric proteins typically lacking connecting peptides and terminal extensions. They are differentially regulated after early development. Four gamma-crystallin genes (gamma-A through gamma-D) and three pseudogenes (gamma-E, gamma-F, gamma-G) are tandemly organized in a genomic segment as a gene cluster. Whether due to aging or mutations in specific genes, gamma-crystallins have been involved in cataract formation.

Gene Name: Crystallin, Gamma A
Synonyms: CRYGA, CRYG1, Crystallin, gamma 1, Crystallin, gamma A, Gamma-A-crystallin, Gamma-crystallin A, CRY-g-A, CRYG5, Gamma-crystallin 5
Target Sequences: P11844 P11844

☰ Filters
Products
Proteins (3)
Over-Expression Lysate (2)
Recombinant (1)
CRYGA (3)
No (3)
Myc-DDK (Flag) (3)
Human (2)
293T Cells (1)
HEK 293 Cells (2)
CRYGA Protein - Western validation with an anti-DDK antibody * L: Control HEK293 lysate R: Over-expression lysate
Select
293T Cells
Myc-DDK (Flag)
20.7 kDa
20 µg/$150
CRYGA Protein - Western validation with an anti-DDK antibody * L: Control HEK293 lysate R: Over-expression lysate
Select
HEK 293 Cells
Myc-DDK (Flag)
20.7 kDa
100 µg/$494
CRYGA Protein - Purified recombinant protein CRYGA was analyzed by SDS-PAGE gel and Coomassie Blue Staining
Select
HEK 293 Cells
Myc-DDK (Flag)
20.7 kDa
20 µg/$1,107
Viewing 1-3 of 3 product results


Filtered By:
Products: Proteins


If you do not find the reagent or information you require, please contact Customer.Support@LSBio.com to inquire about additional products in development.

PLEASE NOTE

For RESEARCH USE ONLY. Intended for use by laboratory professionals. Not intended for human diagnostic or therapeutic purposes.

The data on this page has been compiled from LifeSpan internal sources, the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI), and The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt).