• Contact info@abtriva.com for inquiries and orders.
  • Chinese (Simplified)

  • English

  • German

  • Korean

  • Spanish

United States (English / $ USD)

Recombinant Human Glycogen phosphorylase, liver form (PYGL), Truncated

ACP08870

Number
Order Exclusive Products Now

Request a Quote
High Purity LevelsPrecision and ReliabilityCustomization Options

Specifications


Cat.No ACP08870 Target NamePYGL
FormLyophilized powderExpression SystemCustom Production. Please inquire and provide the desire expression system.
Mol Weight98.8kDProtein LengthPartial
Purity>85% (SDS-PAGE)Storage Buffer5%-50% glycerol. Lyophilized powder form: the buffer before lyophilization is Tris/PBS-based buffer, 6% Trehalose, Liquid form: default storage buffer is Tris/PBS-based buffer, pH 8.0.

Immunogen Information


Target SpeciesHumanUniprot IDP06737
Background Information
  • Uniprot Id

    P06737

  • Target Species

    Human

  • Target Name

    PYGL

  • Target Full Name

    Glycogen phosphorylase, liver form

  • Target Function

    Allosteric enzyme that catalyzes the rate-limiting step in glycogen catabolism, the phosphorolytic cleavage of glycogen to produce glucose-1-phosphate, and plays a central role in maintaining cellular and organismal glucose homeostasis.

  • Target Involvement

    Glycogen storage disease 6 (GSD6)

  • Target Subcellular Location

    Cytoplasm, cytosol.

  • Target Protein Families

    Glycogen phosphorylase family

  • Target Research Area

    Metabolism

  • Target Synonyms

    Glycogen phosphorylase; Glycogen phosphorylase L; Glycogen phosphorylase liver; Glycogen phosphorylase liver form; GSD6; Hers disease; glycogen storage disease type VI; liver form; OTTHUMP00000233649; OTTHUMP00000233651; Phosphorylase glycogen liver; Pygl; PYGL_HUMAN

  • Target Background

    This gene encodes a homodimeric protein that catalyses the cleavage of alpha-1, 4-glucosidic bonds to release glucose-1-phosphate from liver glycogen stores. This protein switches from inactive phosphorylase B to active phosphorylase A by phosphorylation of serine residue 15. Activity of this enzyme is further regulated by multiple allosteric effectors and hormonal controls. Humans have three glycogen phosphorylase genes that encode distinct isozymes that are primarily expressed in liver, brain and muscle, respectively. The liver isozyme serves the glycemic demands of the body in general while the brain and muscle isozymes supply just those tissues. In glycogen storage disease type VI, also known as Hers disease, mutations in liver glycogen phosphorylase inhibit the conversion of glycogen to glucose and results in moderate hypoglycemia, mild ketosis, growth retardation and hepatomegaly. Alternative splicing results in multiple transcript variants encoding different isoforms.

Inquire Recombinant Human Glycogen phosphorylase, liver form (PYGL), Truncated Now



AbTriva respects your privacy and protects your personal data in accordance with AbTriva. For more information, please see our data protection statement. *

Notification