Toggle Nav
Close
  • Menu
  • Setting

transferrin fragment

Catalog No.
A1093
Transferrin fragment
Grouped product items
SizePriceStock Qty
1mg
$50.00
In stock
5mg
$150.00
In stock
10mg
$250.00
In stock
25mg
$350.00
In stock
For scientific research use only and should not be used for diagnostic or medical purposes.

Tel: +1-832-696-8203

Email: [email protected]

Worldwide Distributors

Background

Transferrin is the principal ironbinding protein in animal serum and is analogous in its iron-binding site and properties to lactoferrin1. Human transferrin is a single-chain glycoprotein of molecular weight near 80,000. The molecule is arranged in two lobes, each bearing a single metal-binding site. Although similar in ligand structure2, 3, the sites are distinguishable in many of their properties 4, 5. Sequence homology between the lobes6 and internal homology in organization of the transferrin gene7 establish that the modern protein arose by duplication and fusion of a primitive gene specifying a single-sited transferrin precursor protein.

Each lobe of the transferrin molecule contains a recognition site for the chick receptor, and that both lobes are required for binding to receptor8. The receptor-binding activity of human transferrin is essentially confined to the C-terminal lobe and is preserved in the C-fragment even in the absence of the N-fragment. 

Figure1. Structure of Transferrin

Ref:

1.M. C. Custer And J. Norman Hansen, Lactoferrin and Transferrin Fragments React with Nitrite To Form an Inhibitor of Bacillus cereus Spore Outgrowth, Applied And Environmental Microbiology, Mar. 942-949, 1983

2.Anderson,  B.  F.,  Baker, H. M.,  Dodson, E. J., N o m s ,  G. E., Rumball,  S. V., Waters, J. M.,  and  Baker,  E.  N. (1987) Proc. Natl.  Acad.  Sei.  U. S. A. 84, 1769-1773

3.Bailey, S., Evans, R.  W., Garratt, R. C . ,  Gorinsky, B., Hasnain, S., Horsburgh, C., Jhoti, H., Lindley, P. F.,  Mydin, A., Sarra, R.,  and Watson, J. L. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 5804-5812

4.Aisen, P. (1989) in Iron Carriers and Iron Proteins (Loehr, T. M.,  Gray, H. B., and Lever, H. B. P., eds) pp. 353-371, VCH Publishers, Weinheim.

5.Harris, D. C., and Aisen, P. (1989) in Iron Carriers and Iron Proteins (Loehr, T. M., Gray, H. B., and Lever, A.  B. P.,  eds) pp.  239351, VCH Publishers, Weinheim.

6.MacGillivray, R. T. A,, Mendez, E.,  Shewale, J. G., Sinha, S. K., Lineback-Zins, J., and Brew, K. (1983) J. Biol.  Chem. 258,3543-3553

7.Park, I., Schaeffer, E., Sidoli, A,, Baralle, F. E., Cohen, G. N., and Zakin, M.  M. (1985) Proc. Natl.  Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 82, 3149-3153

8.Olga Zaks, Deborah ’hinder, and Philip AisenSB, Primary Receptor-Recognition Site of Human Transferrin Is in the C-terminal Lobe.  The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 269: 7110-7114,  1994

 

Product Citation

Chemical Properties

Physical AppearanceA solid
StorageStore at -20°C
M.Wt1824.97
FormulaC75H121N23O28S
SynonymsH2N-Ala-Asp-Arg-Asp-Gln-Tyr-Glu-Leu-Leu-Cys-Leu-Asp-Asn-Thr-Arg-OH
Solubility≥182.4 mg/mL in DMSO; insoluble in EtOH; ≥28.35 mg/mL in H2O
SDFDownload SDF
Canonical SMILESNC(C)C(NC(CC(O)=O)C(NC(CCCNC(N)=N)C(NC(CC(O)=O)C(NC(CCC(N)=O)C(NC(CC1=CC=C(O)C=C1)C(NC(CCC(O)=O)C(NC(CC(C)C)C(NC(CC(C)C)C(NC(CS)C(NC(CC(C)C)C(NC(CC(O)=O)C(NC(CC(N)=O)C(NC(C(C)O)C(NC(CCCNC(N)=N)C(O)=O)=O)=O)=O)=O)=O)=O)=O)=O)=O)=O)=O)=O)=O)=O
Shipping ConditionSmall Molecules with Blue Ice, Modified Nucleotides with Dry Ice.
General tips We do not recommend long-term storage for the solution, please use it up soon.

Quality Control

Chemical structure

transferrin fragment