SCL-interrupting locus protein is a protein that in humans is encoded by the STIL gene. This gene encodes a cytoplasmic protein implicated in regulation of the mitotic spindle checkpoint, a regulatory pathway that monitors chromosome segregation during cell division to ensure the proper distribution of chromosomes to daughter cells. The protein is phosphorylated in mitosis and in response to activation of the spindle checkpoint, and disappears when cells transition to G1 phase. It interacts with a mitotic regulator, and its expression is required to efficiently activate the spindle checkpoint. It is proposed to regulate Cdc2 kinase activity during spindle checkpoint arrest. Chromosomal deletions that fuse this gene and the adjacent locus commonly occur in T cell leukemias, and are thought to arise through illegitimate V-(D)-J recombination events. Multiple transcript variants encoding different isoforms have been found for this gene.
Formulation
0.5mg/ml if reconstituted with 0.2ml sterile DI water
Host
Rabbit
Immunogen Region
Recombinant human protein (amino acids N13-F1287) was used as the immunogen for the STIL antibody.
Isotype
IgG
Predicted Reactivity
Human, Mouse, Rat
Reactivity
Mouse, Rat, Human
Recombinant
No
Subcellular Location
Cytoplasmic
Antigen
STIL
Uniprot
Q15468
Buffer
Lyophilized from 1X PBS with 2% Trehalose
Format
Purified
Purification
Antigen affinity purified
Storage
After reconstitution, the STIL antibody can be stored for up to one month at 4°C. For long-term, aliquot and store at -20°C. Avoid repeated freezing and thawing.
Applications
IHC-P, FACS, WB, Direct ELISA
Dilution
Western blot: 0.5-1ug/ml,Immunohistochemistry (FFPE): 2-5ug/ml,Flow cytometry: 1-3ug/million cells,Direct ELISA: 0.1-0.5ug/ml