(Vitamin K Epoxide Reductase Complex, Subunit 1 (VKORC1))
Vitamin K is essential for blood clotting but must be enzymatically activated. This enzymatically activated form of vitamin K is a reduced form required for the carboxylation of glutamic acid residues in some blood-clotting proteins. The product of this gene encodes the enzyme that is responsible for reducing vitamin K 2,3-epoxide to the enzymatically activated form. Fatal bleeding can be caused by vitamin K deficiency and by the vitamin K antagonist warfarin, and it is the product of this gene that is sensitive to warfarin. In humans, mutations in this gene can be associated with deficiencies in vitamin-K-dependent clotting factors and, in humans and rats, with warfarin resistance. Two pseudogenes have been identified on chromosome 1 and the X chromosome. Two alternatively spliced transcripts encoding different isoforms have been described. [provided by RefSeq, Jul 2008].
custom-made
VKORC1
宿主: 人
宿主: Cell-free protein synthesis (CFPS)
Recombinant
approximately 70-80 % as determined by SDS PAGE, Western Blot and analytical SEC (HPLC).
WB, ELISA, SDS