| Field | Specification |
|---|---|
| Mfr No | |
| Accession Number | |
| Alternative Names | Haptoglobin |
| Biological Activity | |
| Expression System | |
| Formulation | |
| Gene ID | |
| Molecular Weight | |
| Product Type | |
| Protein Length | |
| Purity | |
| Shipping | |
| Species | |
| Storage | |
| Target |
Background
HAPTOGLOBIN is supplied as a recombinant protein reagent for research use only. In RUO settings, recombinant proteins provide defined inputs for biochemical assays, interaction mapping, and assay development where control over protein identity and concentration supports reproducibility.
Also known as: Haptoglobin.
Species origin: Human.
Haptoglobin is a glycoprotein, which is synthesized in the liver and circulates in the blood. Haptoglobin is usually produced by liver cells, but it is also produced by other tissues, such as skin, lung and kidney. It is a positive acute phase protein, which binds to free hemoglobin and removes it from circulation to prevent kidney injury and iron loss after hemolysis. Decreased levels can be seen in hemolysis and impaired liver function. A high level is a sign of acute or chronic inflammation. Hemoglobin deficiency or hypohaptoglobinemia is caused by mutation of haptoglobin gene and/or its regulatory region. Haptoglobin is also related to diabetic nephropathy, the incidence of coronary artery disease in type 1 diabetes, Crohn's disease, inflammatory disease behavior, susceptibility to primary sclerosing cholangitis, idiopathic Parkinson's disease and the reduction of the incidence of plasmodium falciparum malaria.
Endotoxin: < 0.1 EU per μg of the protein as determined by the LAL method.
Biological significance and function
HAPTOGLOBIN is used in RUO research to interrogate molecular mechanisms, interaction networks, and pathway-linked phenotypes in experimental systems. This target is frequently investigated in research themes such as Molecular & Cellular Biology.
Molecular characteristics
Molecular characteristics: Protein domains, oligomeric state, and modification-sensitive surfaces can influence binding behavior and functional readouts in vitro. Where relevant, isoforms and PTMs may alter activity, stability, or interaction specificity.
- Source species: Human
- Molecular weight: 29.5 kDa
- Protein length: The recombinant Human Haptoglobin consists of 245 amino acids and predicts a molecular mass of 29.5 kDa.
- Expression region: Amino acid sequence derived from Human Haptoglobin (AAA88080.1) (Ile162-Asn406) was expressed with 6×His tag at N-terminus.
- Purity: > 95 % as determined by SDS-PAGE
- Biological activity: Testing in progress
Post-translational considerations: E. coli expression typically yields a non-glycosylated recombinant form. This is often suitable for many intracellular enzymes and binding studies, while PTM-dependent targets may show differences when glycosylation or specific disulfide-bond patterns are required.
Expression and purification strategy
Expression system: E. coli. Expression system selection can influence folding state and PTM profile, which may affect binding or activity for PTM-sensitive targets.
Tagging: His tag tags are commonly used to streamline purification and enable capture/immobilization in interaction assays. Tag presence or removal can influence some binding measurements depending on assay design.
Formulation: Lyophilized from sterile PBS, pH 7.4.. Formulation and buffer composition can influence stability, aggregation propensity, and assay background in downstream biochemical experiments.
Research interpretation
Research interpretation: Recombinant protein reagents enable controlled experiments such as interaction reconstitution, quantitative calibration, and mechanistic perturbation with defined inputs. Interpretation is strengthened by pairing the primary readout with orthogonal markers that report on pathway state, localization, and complex assembly.
What is the purity of Human Haptoglobin Protein, His tag (Human)?
What buffer is this protein supplied in?
How should Human Haptoglobin Protein, His tag (Human) be stored?
What expression system was used to produce this protein?
What is the molecular weight of this protein?
Is this protein biologically active?
What are the shipping conditions?
Is this protein approved for clinical or in vitro diagnostic use?
Can I request a custom size, tag variant, or formulation?
Can’t Find What You’re Looking For? We can help you source the best match or customize a recombinant protein solution for your study. Options may include species (human/mouse/rat), protein region/domain (full-length vs fragment), tag or label (His/GST/FLAG/biotin/fluorescent), expression system (E. coli/HEK293/insect), purity grade, formulation (buffer, carrier-free, glycerol-free), activity/functional validation (binding or enzymatic assays), endotoxin level (low-endotoxin for cell-based work), mutants/variants (point mutations, isoforms), and bulk or custom packaging. Click Talk to a Scientist to submit a request form, email us at support@biohippo.com, or explore our Research Services for additional support. Our team will be in contact with you shortly.