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Encyclopedia > Isoform

In biology, a protein isoform is a version of a protein with some small differences, usually a splice variant or the product of some posttranslational modification.


Glycoforms

A glycoform is an isoform where different versions of a glycoprotein have different glycans attached to them, by either posttranslational or cotranslational modifications


  Results from FactBites:
 
Dystrophin isoforms and their expression (2674 words)
The presence of this isoform was confirmed by Muntoni et al.
This isoform is expressed predominantly in neurons of the cortex and the CA regions of the hippocampus.
The Dp260 isoform was identified by Pillers et al.
Characterization of Multiple Isoforms of Protein 4.1R Expressed During Erythroid Terminal Differentiation -- Gascard et ... (7278 words)
E16 isoforms, fixed with 3% paraformaldehyde, permeabilized with 0.5% Triton X-100, and processed for immunofluorescence using a polyclonal anti-HA-epitope tag antibody as primary antibody and anti-rabbit IgG coupled to FITC as secondary antibody.
E16 isoforms, fixed with 3% paraformaldehyde, permeabilized with 0.5% Triton X-100, and processed for immunofluorescence using a monoclonal anti-c-myc-epitope tag antibody and a polyclonal anti-HA-epitope tag antibody as primary antibodies and anti-mouse IgG coupled to Texas red and rabbit IgG coupled to FITC as secondary antibodies.
isoform was strongly expressed in the nucleus, the plasma membrane, and apparent centrosomes.
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