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| Alternative Names | Sid 3177, Co chaperone p23, cPGES, HSP90 co chaperone, cytosolic prostaglandin E2 synthase, PTGES3, TEBP, Prostaglandin E synthase 3 |
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Background
P23 is provided as a recombinant protein reagent for research use only. It is commonly used as a defined molecular component in biochemical and cell-free systems where controlled protein input supports mechanistic study and assay development.
Protein identity context: P23 (source species: Human; native localization: Cytoplasm).
Human Recombinant p23 Protein
p23 is a small co-chaperone that stabilizes the ATP-bound conformation of HSP90, promoting the maturation of client proteins and preventing premature release. It plays a key role in the late stages of the HSP90 chaperone cycle, ensuring proper folding and functional activation of a wide range of signaling proteins.
Biological significance and function
P23 is used in RUO research to interrogate molecular mechanisms, interaction networks, and pathway-linked phenotypes in experimental systems. This protein is frequently discussed in research themes such as Cancer and Heat Shock.
Molecular characteristics
Molecular characteristics: Key molecular attributes can influence binding behavior, stability, and assay background—especially for multimeric, disulfide-rich, or PTM-dependent proteins.
- Source species: Human
- Cellular localization (native): Cytoplasm
- Protein size: ~23 kDa
- Purity: >90%
- Expression system: E. coli
- Purification: Affinity Purified
- Storage buffer: 20mM HEPES buffer pH7.2, 80mM NaCl, 10% glycerol
Post-translational considerations: E. coli expression typically yields a non-glycosylated recombinant form. This is often appropriate for intracellular enzymes and many binding studies, but extracellular ligands/receptors or disulfide-rich proteins may show activity or stability differences when PTMs are required.
Expression and purification strategy
Expression system: E. coli. Expression host choice can influence folding and PTM state, which may affect binding or activity depending on protein class.
Purification strategy: Affinity Purified. Purification method and formulation help determine sample homogeneity and background in downstream biochemical assays.
Research interpretation
Research interpretation: Recombinant protein reagents can support controlled experiments such as reconstitution of molecular interactions, quantitative calibration, and mechanistic perturbation studies with defined inputs. Interpreting outcomes typically benefits from pairing the primary readout with orthogonal markers that report on pathway state, localization, and complex formation.
Certificate of Analysis: This product has been certified >90% pure using SDS PAGE analysis. 4uM SPR-303, when added to 2uM SPR-300 (Aha1)-activated HSP90 (2uM; His-tagged HSP90 beta) in 33mM Hepes pH7.2, 30mM NaCl, 5mM MgCl2, 1mM DTT, 1.5mM ATP in a 100ul reaction at 37 degrees C, eliminated all Aha1-mediated ATPase stimulation as well as intrinsic HSP90 ATPase activity. (This is an enzyme-linked ATP regeneration assay tracking loss of NADH absorbance at 340nm).
Tariff Code: 3822.19.0030
UNSPSC Code: 12352202
ADR Code: Non-hazardous
UN Code for transport: Non-hazardous
Cite this Product: Human Recombinant p23 Protein (StressMarq Biosciences | Victoria, BC CANADA | Catalog# SPR-303A)
Human Recombinant p23 Protein (StressMarq Biosciences | Victoria, BC CANADA | Catalog# SPR-303B)
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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.
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4. Nair S.C., et al. (1996) Cell Stress Chaperones. 1: 237-50.
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8. Felts S.J. & Toft D.O. (2003) Cell Stress Chaperones. 8: 108-13.
9. Gausdal G., Gjertsen B.T., Fladmark K.E., Demol H., Vandekerckhove J. & Doskeland S.O. (2004) Leukemia.