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home > Product Catalogue > Cell Signaling Technology > Lymphocyte Signaling > Blimp-1/PRDI-BF1 (C14A4) Rabbit mAb

Blimp-1/PRDI-BF1 (C14A4) Rabbit mAb #9115

Catalog # Size & Concentration Price(£) Qty
9115S 100 ul (10 western blots) 172.00
Please contact us for bulks/custom orders/drug discovery applications

Applications Reactivity Sensitivity MW (kDa) Isotype
W IP IF-IC H M (Mk) Endogenous 95-100 Rabbit IgG

Applications Key:  W=Western Blotting  IP=Immunoprecipitation  IF-IC=Immunofluorescence (Immunocytochemistry)
Reactivity Key:  H=Human  M=Mouse  Mk=Monkey
Species cross-reactivity is determined by Western blot.

Protocols

Specificity / Sensitivity

Blimp-1/PRDI-BF1 (C14A4) Rabbit mAb detects endogenous levels of total Blimp-1/PRDI-BF1 protein.

Source / Purification

Monoclonal antibody is produced by immunizing animals with a synthetic peptide corresponding to residues surrounding Val90 of human PRDI-BF1.

Western Blotting

Western Blotting

Western blot analysis of extracts from Karpas 620, SR and H929 cell lines using Blimp-1/PRDI-BF1 (C14A4) Rabbit mAb.

IF-IC

IF-IC

Confocal immunofluorescent analysis of SR (left) and HeLa cells (right) using Blimp-1/PRDI-BF1 (C14A4) Rabbit mAb (green). Blue pseudocolor = DRAQ5™ (fluorescent DNA dye).

Background

Blimp-1 (B lymphocyte-induced maturation protein) is a nuclear zinc-finger containing transcriptional repressor that is considered a master regulator of terminal B-cell development (1). The human homolog, PRDI-BF1, was identified by its ability to bind to the PRDI element on the IFN-β promoter and can inhibit virus-mediated IFN-β production (2). Expression of Blimp-1 is sufficient to drive terminal differentiation of BCL1 lymphoma cells into antibody secreting plasma cells, increasing the expression of the cell surface marker Syndecan-1 (1). In the B-cell lineage, Blimp-1 is specifically expressed in antibody-secreting cells including activated B and plasma cells. In addition, Blimp-1 has been found during macrophage differentiation (3) and in a subset of T-cells (4,5) suggesting it may play a wider role in homeostasis and differentiation (6). Mechanistically, Blimp-1 is thought to act by recruiting chromatin-modifying enzymes including histone deacetylases (7) and methyltransferases (8,9). Target genes of Blimp-1 transcriptional repression with potential roles in differentiation include c-Myc (10), CIITA (11), Pax5 (12), Spi-B, and Id3 (13).

  1. Turner, C.A. et al. (1994) Cell 77, 297-306.
  2. Keller, A.D. and Maniatis, T. (1991) Genes Dev 5, 868-79.
  3. Chang, D.H. et al. (2000) Nat Immunol 1, 169-76.
  4. Kallies, A. et al. (2006) Nat Immunol 7, 466-74.
  5. Martins, G.A. et al. (2006) Nat Immunol 7, 457-65.
  6. Kallies, A. and Nutt, S.L. (2007) Curr Opin Immunol 19, 156-62.
  7. Yu, J. et al. (2000) Mol Cell Biol 20, 2592-603.
  8. Gyory, I. et al. (2004) Nat Immunol 5, 299-308.
  9. Ancelin, K. et al. (2006) Nat Cell Biol 8, 623-30.
  10. Lin, Y. et al. (1997) Science 276, 596-9.
  11. Chen, H. et al. (2007) Mol Immunol 44, 1461-70.
  12. Lin, K.I. et al. (2002) Mol Cell Biol 22, 4771-80.
  13. Shaffer, A.L. et al. (2006) Immunol Rev 210, 67-85.
Application References

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This product is intended for research purposes only. The product is not intended to be used for therapeutic or diagnostic purposes in humans or animals.