human DGKZ Over-expression AAV
This is an AAV expressing Human DGKZ.
AAV-206928
AAV-h-DGKZ
Ready-to-use AAV expressing Human DGKZ (diacylglycerol kinase zeta). Available with optional GFP reporter or cell-specific promoter.
Gene Reference Data
Alternate Names
DAG kinase zeta; DAGK5; DAGK6; DGK-ZETA; diacylglycerol kinase zeta; diacylglycerol kinase, zeta 104kDa; diglyceride kinase zeta; hDGKzeta
Description (eCommerce)
Diacylglycerol kinase, zeta, belongs to the eukaryotic diacylglycerol kinase family, a family of enzymes that convert DAG to phosphatidic acid (PA).
Description (Vector)
DGKZ belongs to the eukaryotic diacylglycerol kinase family. It may attenuate protein kinase C activity by regulating diacylglycerol levels in intracellular signaling cascade and signal transduction. Alternative splicing occurs at this locus and multiple transcript variants encoding distinct isoforms have been identified.
Gene ID
8525
Gene Name (eCommerce)
diacylglycerol kinase zeta
Gene Name (Vector)
diacylglycerol kinase zeta
Gene Symbol
DGKZ
HGNC ID
HGNC:2857
NCBI Taxonomy ID (eCommerce)
9606.0
ORF Size (aa)
2790
ORF Size (bp)
2790 bp
Protein Name (eCommerce)
Diacylglycerol kinase zeta
RefSeq ID
NM_003646
RefSeq Synonyms
NM_201533, NM_201532, NM_003646, NM_001199268, NM_001199267, NM_001199266, NM_001105540, BC041770,
Research Areas
Cell Cycle,DNA Damage/Repair,GPCR Signaling,Metabolism/Metabolic Process,Signal Transduction,Zinc-finger
Research Areas (Faceted)
signal_transduction,cell_biology,cell_cycle,genetics,transcription_translation,signal_transduction,metabolism,cell_biology
Species
human
Target Sentence
Diacylglycerol kinase, zeta, belongs to the eukaryotic diacylglycerol kinase family, a family of enzymes that convert DAG to phosphatidic acid (PA).
UniGene ID
Hs.502461
UniProt ID (eCommerce)
Q13574
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About Storage Conditions
All our viral products should be kept at -80°C. At this temperature, the virus will remain stable for 6-12 months (and in some cases, up to 2 years). Once thawed, the product can be stored at 4°C for 2-3 weeks without significant loss of biological activity.
We recommend aliquoting your vectors into low protein binding tubes upon receipt. This helps avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles, as well as prevent loss of virus. To maintain accurate titer, aliquot in at least 20ul per tube.