Human Anti-CD209 / DC-SIGN Antibody Product Attributes
CD209 / DC-SIGN Previously Observed Antibody Staining Patterns
Observed Antibody Staining Data By Tissue Type:
Variations in CD209 / DC-SIGN antibody staining intensity in immunohistochemistry on tissue sections are present across different anatomical locations. Low, but measureable presence of CD209 / DC-SIGN could be seen in. We were unable to detect CD209 / DC-SIGN in other tissues. Disease states, inflammation, and other physiological changes can have a substantial impact on antibody staining patterns. These measurements were all taken in tissues deemed normal or from patients without known disease.
CD209 / DC-SIGN General Information | |
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Alternate Names | |
DC-SIGN, Dendritic Cell-Specific Intercellular adhesion molecule-3-Grabbing Non-integrin, CD209, Cluster of Differentiation 209, | |
Molecular Weight | |
45kDa | |
Chromosomal Location | |
19p13 | |
Curated Database and Bioinformatic Data | |
Gene Symbol | CD209 |
Entrez Gene ID | 30835 |
Ensemble Gene ID | ENSG00000090659 |
RefSeq Protein Accession(s) | NP_001138366, NP_001138368, NP_001138369, NP_001138365, XP_005272529, NP_001138367, NP_066978, NP_001138371 |
RefSeq mRNA Accession(s) | NM_001144897, NM_001144899, XM_005272472, NM_001144894, NM_001144895 NM_001144893, NM_001144896, NR_026692, NM_021155 |
RefSeq Genomic Accession(s) | NC_018930, NC_000019, NG_012167 |
UniProt ID(s) | B2R907, X6RB12, Q9NNX6, M0R0P0, B4E2A8 |
UniGene ID(s) | B2R907, X6RB12, Q9NNX6, M0R0P0, B4E2A8 |
HGNC ID(s) | 1641 |
Cosmic ID(s) | CD209 |
KEGG Gene ID(s) | hsa:30835 |
PharmGKB ID(s) | PA26199 |
General Description of CD209 / DC-SIGN. | |
DC-SIGN is a transmembrane receptor that is expressed on the surface of dendritic cells and macrophages. It is involved in the innate immune system and recognizes numerous evolutionarily divergent pathogens ranging from parasites to viruses. The protein is organized into three distinct domains: an N-terminal transmembrane domain, a tandem-repeat neck domain and C-type lectin carbohydrate recognition domain. The extracellular region consisting of the C-type lectin and neck domains has a dual function as a pathogen recognition receptor and a cell adhesion receptor by binding carbohydrate ligands on the surface of microbes and enCanineenous cells. The neck region is important for homo-oligomerization, which allows the receptor to bind multivalent ligands with high avidity. |
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