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Catalog Number | orb1953366 |
---|---|
Category | Proteins |
Description | Complement is an integral component of the adaptive and innate immune systems and represents one of the major effector systems for the immune responses. The classical complement pathway is triggered by C1, a complex composed of the binding protein C1q and two proenzymes, C1r and C1s. Upon binding of IgG to the head of C1q, C1r undergoes autoactivation and in turn cleaves and activates C1s. C1r and C1s, the proteases responsible for activation and proteolytic activity of the C1 complex of complement, share similar overall structural organizations featuring five nonenzymic protein modules (two CUB modules surrounding a single EGF module, and a pair of CCP modules) followed by a serine protease domain. Besides highly specific proteolytic activities, both proteases exhibit interaction properties associated with their N-terminal regions. In contrast, C1r and C1s widely differ from each other by their glycosylation patterns: both proteins contain Asn-linked carbohydrates, but four glycosylation sites are present on C1r, and only two on C1s. As a highly specific serine protease, C1s executes the catalytic function of the C1 complex: the cleavage of C4 and C2, and thus instigates a sequence of activation steps of other components of the complement system, culminating in the formation of the membrane attack complex which induces cell lysis. Like other complement serine proteases C1s has restricted substrate specificity and it is engaged into specific interactions with other subcomponents of the complement system. The only other protein known to interact with C1s physiologically is SerpinC1, an inhibitor of serine protease, which inhibits C1s activity and thus plays a regulatory role in controlling the function of C1s enzyme. |
Tag | C-His |
Purity | 98.00% |
MW | 76.3 kDa (predicted); 82.06 kDa, 56.59 kDa and 33.36 kDa (reducing condition, due to glycosylation) |
UniProt ID | P09871 |
Expression System | HEK293 Cells |
Biological Origin | Human |
Biological Activity | Complement is an integral component of the adaptive and innate immune systems and represents one of the major effector systems for the immune responses. The classical complement pathway is triggered by C1, a complex composed of the binding protein C1q and two proenzymes, C1r and C1s. Upon binding of IgG to the head of C1q, C1r undergoes autoactivation and in turn cleaves and activates C1s. C1r and C1s, the proteases responsible for activation and proteolytic activity of the C1 complex of complement, share similar overall structural organizations featuring five nonenzymic protein modules (two CUB modules surrounding a single EGF module, and a pair of CCP modules) followed by a serine protease domain. Besides highly specific proteolytic activities, both proteases exhibit interaction properties associated with their N-terminal regions. In contrast, C1r and C1s widely differ from each other by their glycosylation patterns: both proteins contain Asn-linked carbohydrates, but four glycosylation sites are present on C1r, and only two on C1s. As a highly specific serine protease, C1s executes the catalytic function of the C1 complex: the cleavage of C4 and C2, and thus instigates a sequence of activation steps of other components of the complement system, culminating in the formation of the membrane attack complex which induces cell lysis. Like other complement serine proteases C1s has restricted substrate specificity and it is engaged into specific interactions with other subcomponents of the complement system. The only other protein known to interact with C1s physiologically is SerpinC1, an inhibitor of serine protease, which inhibits C1s activity and thus plays a regulatory role in controlling the function of C1s enzyme. |
Expression Region | A DNA sequence encoding the recombinant human complement componentC1s (NP_001725.1) (Met 1-Asp 688) was expressed with a C-terminal polyhistidine tag. Predicted N terminal: Glu 16 |
Storage | -20°C |
Note | For research use only |
Application notes | A Certificate of Analysis (CoA) containing reconstitution instructions is included with the products. Please refer to the CoA for detailed information. |
Expiration Date | 6 months from date of receipt. |
The purity of the protein is greater than 85% as determined by SDS-PAGE and Coomassie blue staining. | |
The protein has a predicted molecular mass of 75.7 kDa after removal of the signal peptide. The apparent molecular mass of C1S-His is approximately 70-100 kDa due to glycosylation. | |
Mammalian |
Unconjugated | |
95% | |
24.6 kDa | |
Human HABP1, His Tag (orb257938) is expressed from E.coli cells. It contains AA His 75 - Gln 282 (Accession # Q07021-1). |
98.00% | |
95-120 KDa (reducing condition) |
98.00% | |
38 kDa (predicted); 46 kDa (reducing condition, due to glycosylation) |