AAV with CMV-IVS promoter driven SEAP
This AAV expresses SEAP driven by an ubiquitous CMV-IVS promoter.
The CMV-IVS promoter is about 1.1 kb in length and consists of the commonly used CMV promoter/enhancer and the intron (IVS) from beta-globin . The presence of intron elements was shown to give a higher level of transgene expression than that of the original CMV promoter/enhancer.
The SEAP reporter gene encodes a truncated form of the human placental alkaline phosphatase that lacks the membrane anchoring domain. Therefore, the protein can be efficiently secreted from transfected cells allowing for detection of reporter gene activity without cell lysis. Using a secreted reporter protein has several advantages over traditional reporter assays: 1) Cell lysis is not required for analysis so a single set of cells can be used for both the SEAP assay and another purpose; 2) Gene expression kinetics can be studied by the repeated collection of the culture medium from the same cultures; and 3) By changing the culture medium prior to an experiment, the assay background is reduced to an extremely low level.
Ready-to-use AAV expressing SEAP driven by an ubiquitous CMV-IVS promoter. Available in AAV1, AAV2, AAV5, AAV6, AAV8, AAV9, AAV-DJ and other serotypes.