Small nuclear ribonucleoproteins, also known as snRNPs, combine with other proteins to form spliceosomes, a complex that catalyzes pre-mRNA splicing. There are two types of spliceosomes: U2 and U12. The U2-type spliceosome is found in all eukaryotes and excises U2-type introns, which account for the majority of pre-mRNA introns. The U12-type spliceosome removes U12-type introns, which comprise less than 1% of all human introns. The U12-type spliceosome is comprised of the U11 and U12 snRNPs as well as the U4/U6.U5 tri-snRNP. U11 and U12 bind as a U11/U12 di-snRNP complex, which recognizes the 5’ splice site of the pre-mRNA during the first steps of U12-type spliceosome formation. U11/U12 snRNPs contain several proteins, including seven that are unique to the U11/U12snRNP: 65K, 59K, 48K, 35K, 31K, 25K and 20K. U11/U12 snRNP 35K is a 246 amino acid protein localized to the nucleus, and it contains a motif known to mediate RNA binding. Two named isoforms of this protein exist as a result of alternative splicing events.
Key Feature
Clonality
Polyclonal
Isotype
IgG
Host Species
Rabbit
Tested Applications
WBIPIFIHCELISA
recommended for detection of U11/U12 snRNP 35K of human origin by WB, IP, IF, IHC(P) and ELISA