TIMP-4 recombinant protein product blog
Tags: TIMP-4; Recombinant Protein; Metalloproteinase inhibitor 4; TIMP-4 recombinant protein;





The TIMP-4 timp4 product has the following accession number(s) (GI #4507515) (NCBI Accession #NP_003247.1) (Uniprot Accession #Q99727). Researchers may be interested in using Bioinformatics databases such as those available at The National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) website for more information about accession numbers and the proteins they represent. Even researchers unfamiliar with bioinformatics databases will find the NCBI databases to be quite user friendly and useful. The amino acid sequence is listed below:
CSCAPAHPQQ HICHSALVIR AKISSEKVVP ASADPADTEK MLRYEIKQIK MFKGFEKVKD VQYIYTPFDS SLCGVKLEAN SQKQYLLTGQ VLSDGKVFIH LCNYIEPWED LSLVQRESLN HHYHLNCGCQ ITTCYTVPCT ISAPNECLWT DWLLERKLYG YQAQHYVCMK HVDGTCSWYR GHLPLRKEFV DIVQP.
To buy or view more detailed product information and pricing, please click on the technical datasheet page below:
Please refer to the product datasheet for known applications of a given recombinant protein. We\'ve tested the Recombinant Human Metalloproteinase inhibitor 4 with the following immunoassay(s):
SDS-PAGE

Our knowledge of the role of proteins in cellular processes is continually evolving. Most proteins, including Metalloproteinase inhibitor 4 are typically involved in one or more signaling pathways or biological processes. Professionally manufactured recombinant proteins are increasingly becoming essential and commonplace tools for elucidating new knowledge about the role of proteins in both health and disease.
TIMP-4 also interacts with the following gene(s): MMP13, MMP14, MMP2, MMP26, MMP3, MMP7, MMP8, MMP9. Bone, Brain, Connective Tissue, Embryonic Tissue, Eye, Heart, Liver, Lung, Skin, Vascular tissues are correlated with this protein. Atherosclerosis, Cardiovascular Diseases, Disease Models, Animal, Fibrosis, Hypertrophy, Inflammation, Lung Neoplasms, Myocardial Infarction, Necrosis, Nervous System Diseases are some of the diseases may be linked to Recombinant Human Metalloproteinase inhibitor 4. The following patways have been known to be associated with this gene.