Product Sheet CA0636
Description
BACKGROUND Angiopoietins belong to a distinct family of angiogenic proteins including Ang1-4, which have been shown to play fundamental physiological roles in maintenance of vascular integrity. Ang1 was identified as the major physiological ligand for Tie2 receptor tyrosine kinase, responsible for recruiting and sustaining periendothelial support cells. Ang2 was found to disrupt blood vessel formation in the developing embryo by antagonizing the effects of Ang1 and Tie2, and it was thus concluded that Ang2 represents a natural Ang1/Tie2 inhibitor. Extrapolation of these developmental findings to postnatal neovascularization has led to the dual inferences that Ang1 may induce maturation and stabilization of developing neovasculature, whereas Ang2 may cause destabilization required for additional sprout formation.1 Ang1 binds to Tie2 and induces its activation via tyrosine phosphorylation. Through the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-Akt pathway and others, Ang1 exerts prosurvival, antipermeability, and anti-inflammatory effects on endothelial cells (ECs). However, it was demonstrated that that the role of Ang-1 in angiogenesis and vascular permeability is secondary to increasing periendothelial support and vessel stabilization. Thus, Ang-1 could potentially serve as an antineoplastic or anti-permeability agent for patients with metastatic colorectal cancer.2 Whereas, other studies suggested Ang-1 is a tumor agiogenesis promoter.3 Furthermore, it was demonstrated that Ang2 possesses both partial agonistic as well as antagonistic action on Tie2 in ECs—alone, Ang2 is a weak but necessary activator of Tie2, whereas in the presence of Ang1, Ang2 inhibits Tie2 signaling. Moreover, ECs secrete Ang2, which in turn maintains a basal level of Tie2 phosphorylation.4
REFERENCES
1. Maisonpierre,P.C. et al: Science 277:55-60, 1997
2. Stoeltzing, O. et al: Cancer Res. 63: 3370–7, 2003
3. Machein, M.R. et al: Am. J. Pathol. 165:1557-70, 2004
4. Yuan, H.T. et al: Mol. Cell. Biol. 29:2011-22, 2009
2. Stoeltzing, O. et al: Cancer Res. 63: 3370–7, 2003
3. Machein, M.R. et al: Am. J. Pathol. 165:1557-70, 2004
4. Yuan, H.T. et al: Mol. Cell. Biol. 29:2011-22, 2009
Products are for research use only. They are not intended for human, animal, or diagnostic applications.
Details
Cat.No.: | CA0636 |
Antigen: | C-terminal sequence of humanAngiopoietin-1 |
Isotype: | Affinity-purifiedrabbit polyclonal IgG |
Species & predicted species cross- reactivity ( ): | Human, Rabbit, Rat, Dog, Mouse |
Applications & Suggested starting dilutions:* | WB 1:500 to 1:1000 IP n/d IHC (Paraffin) 1:50 to 1:200 ICC n/d FACS n/d |
Predicted Molecular Weight of protein: | 52 kDa |
Specificity/Sensitivity: | No cross-reactivity with other members of the family |
Storage: | Store at 4° C for frequent use; at -20° C for at least one year. |
*Optimal working dilutions must be determined by end user.
Products
Product | Size | CAT.# | Price | Quantity |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rabbit Anti-Angiopoietin-1 Antibody: Rabbit Anti-Angiopoietin-1 Antibody | Size: 100 ul | CAT.#: CA0636 | Price: $302.00 |
Resources/Documents
Publications
2014
Wiles, J., R. Katchko, E. Benavides, C. O’Gorman, J. Escudero, D. Keisler, R. Stanko and M. Garcia. 2014. The effect of leptin on luteal angiogenic factors during the luteal phase of the estrous cycle in goats. Animal Reprod Sci, 148:121-129.