The steady state of protein tyrosyl phosphorylation in cells is regulated by the opposing action of tyrosine kinases and protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs). Several groups have independently identified a non-transmembrane PTP, designated SH-PTP1 (also known as PTPN11, PTP1C, HCP and SHP), which is primarily expressed in hematopoietic cells and characterized by the presence of two SH2 domains N-terminal to the PTP domain. SH2 domains generally mediate the association of regulatory molecules with specific phosphotyrosine-containing sites on autophosphorylated receptors, thereby controlling the initial interaction of receptors with these substrates. A second and much more widely expressed PTP with SH2 domains, SH-PTP2 (also designated PTP1D and Syp), has been identified. Strong sequence similarity between SH-PTP2 and the Drosophila gene corkscrew (CSW) and their similar patterns of expression suggest that SH-PTP2 is the human corkscrew homolog.
Clone
MD344
Isotype
IgG2a/k
Host species
Mouse
Species Reactivity
Human, mouse, rat
Cellular Localization
Cytoplasm, nucleus
Positive Control
Cerebellum tissue , testis, placenta
Applications
IHC, ICC/IF, IP, WB
Intended Use
Research Use Only
![SIRPα/Signal Regulatory Protein Alpha [MD344]](https://medaysis.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/SIRPα-Signal-Regulatory-Protein-Alpha-MD344-MC0054_human-cerebellum-e1721436246612.jpg)