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EHU144161

Sigma-Aldrich

MISSION® esiRNA

targeting human IL2

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About This Item

UNSPSC Code:
41105324
NACRES:
NA.51

description

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Quality Level

product line

MISSION®

form

lyophilized powder

esiRNA cDNA target sequence

ACCTCAACTCCTGCCACAATGTACAGGATGCAACTCCTGTCTTGCATTGCACTAAGTCTTGCACTTGTCACAAACAGTGCACCTACTTCAAGTTCTACAAAGAAAACACAGCTACAACTGGAGCATTTACTGCTGGATTTACAGATGATTTTGAATGGAATTAATAATTACAAGAATCCCAAACTCACCAGGATGCTCACATTTAAGTTTTACATGCCCAAGAAGGCCACAGAACTGAAACATCTTCAGTGTCTAGAAGAAGAACTCAAACCTCTGGAGGAAGTGCTAAATTTAGCTCAAAGCAAAAACTTTCACTTAAGACCCAGGGACTTAATCAGCAATATCAACGTAATAGTTCTGGAACTAAAGGGATCTGAAACAACATTCATGTGTGAATATGCTGATGAGACAGCAACCAT

Ensembl | human accession no.

NCBI accession no.

shipped in

ambient

storage temp.

−20°C

Gene Information

General description

MISSION esiRNA are endoribonuclease prepared siRNA. They are a heterogeneous mixture of siRNA that all target the same mRNA sequence. These multiple silencing triggers lead to highly-specific and effective gene silencing.

For additional details as well as to view all available esiRNA options, please visit SigmaAldrich.com/esiRNA.

Legal Information

MISSION is a registered trademark of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany

Storage Class Code

10 - Combustible liquids

Flash Point(F)

Not applicable

Flash Point(C)

Not applicable


Certificates of Analysis (COA)

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Gang Li et al.
Molecular medicine reports, 12(1), 760-768 (2015-02-20)
Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) are a heterogeneous group of cells, which have been revealed to inhibit T-cell responses in tumor-bearing mice. In addition, a number of immune suppressive mechanisms have linked MDSCs and the development of human cancer. However, the
Claudia Arenaccio et al.
Journal of virology, 88(19), 11529-11539 (2014-07-25)
Resting CD4+ T lymphocytes resist human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Here, we provide evidence that exosomes from HIV-1-infected cells render resting human primary CD4+ T lymphocytes permissive to HIV-1 replication. These results were obtained with transwell cocultures of HIV-1-infected cells

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