ELISA kits are commonly used to measure soluble biomarkers across a variety of research areas. ELISA kits for Human Estrogen Receptor beta can be quantified in various samples, including cell lysate, plasma, serum, tissue homogenate.
Invitrogen ELISA kits exist in two formats:...ELISA kits are commonly used to measure soluble biomarkers across a variety of research areas. ELISA kits for Human Estrogen Receptor beta can be quantified in various samples, including cell lysate, plasma, serum, tissue homogenate.
Invitrogen ELISA kits exist in two formats: Uncoated and Coated....ELISA kits are commonly used to measure soluble biomarkers across a variety of research areas. ELISA kits for Human Estrogen Receptor beta can be quantified in various samples, including cell lysate, plasma, serum, tissue homogenate.
Invitrogen ELISA kits exist in two formats: Uncoated and Coated. Uncoated ELISA kits include all the necessary reagents to coat your own plates and run your assay with maximum flexibility. Coated ELISA kits...
ELISA kits are commonly used to measure soluble biomarkers across a variety of research areas. ELISA kits for Human Estrogen Receptor beta can be quantified in various samples, including cell lysate, plasma, serum, tissue homogenate.
Invitrogen ELISA kits exist in two formats: Uncoated and Coated. Uncoated ELISA kits include all the necessary reagents to coat your own plates and run your assay with maximum flexibility. Coated ELISA kits are ready-to-use and quality tested for sensitivity, specificity, precision and lot-to-lot consistency.
靶标信息
Estrogen Receptor beta (ER beta, NR3A2) protein is approximately 55kD, though multiple isoforms ranging from 36-59kD have been described. Human ER beta was initially cloned and characterized from testis. Estrogen Receptors (ER) are members of the steroid/thyroid hormone receptor superfamily of nuclear receptors. The estrogen receptor is a ligand-activated transcription factor, that when bound to estrogen hormone, induces a conformational change that allows dimerization and binding to estrogen response elements (ERE) in DNA. When bound to EREs, ER can positively or negatively regulate gene transcription through the recruitment of coactivator or corepressor proteins. There are two different forms of the estrogen receptor, alpha and beta, encoded by separate genes (ESR1 and ESR2, respectively). Estrogen receptor beta (ER beta) binds estrogens with an affinity similar to that of estrogen receptor alpha. Some ER beta isoforms dominantly inhibit the activity of estrogen receptor alpha in reproductive tissues. ER beta is found widely in many tissues throughout the body and can act as a potent tumor suppressor, playing a crucial role in many cancer types such as prostate cancer, autism spectrum disorder, medullary thyroid carcinoma, De Quervain Disease and risk of cardiovascular disease.