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EHU138681

Sigma-Aldrich

MISSION® esiRNA

targeting human MYOG

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About This Item

UNSPSC Code:
41105324
NACRES:
NA.51

description

Powered by Eupheria Biotech

product line

MISSION®

form

lyophilized powder

esiRNA cDNA target sequence

CCTACAGATGCCCACAACCTGCACTCCCTCACCTCCATCGTGGACAGCATCACAGTGGAAGATGTGTCTGTGGCCTTCCCAGATGAAACCATGCCCAACTGAGATTGTCTTCCAAGCCGGGCATCCTTGCGAGCCCCCCAAGCTGGCCACAGATGCCACTACTTCTGTAGCAGGGGCCTCCTAAGCCAGGCTGCCCTGATGCTAGGAAGCCAGCTCTGGGGTGCCATAGGCCAGACTATCCCCTTCCTCATCCATGTAAGGTTAACCCACCCCCCAGCAAGGGACTGGACGCCCTCATTCAGCTGCCTCCTTAGAGGAGAGGGCATCCCCTTTCCAGGGAGGTAAAGCAGGGGACCAGAGCGCCCCCTCGTGTATGCCCCAGCTCAGGGGGCAAACTCAGGAGCTTCCTTTTTATCATAACGCGGCCTC

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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Chi Yan et al.
International journal of molecular sciences, 16(10), 25014-25030 (2015-10-23)
Fat-induced transcript 1 (FIT1/FITM1) gene is a member of the conserved gene family important for triglyceride-rich lipid droplet accumulation. FIT1 gene displays a similar muscle-specific expression across pigs, mice, and humans. Thus pigs can act as a useful model of
Adeel Malik et al.
PloS one, 10(7), e0133597-e0133597 (2015-07-23)
Muscle, a multinucleate syncytium formed by the fusion of mononuclear myoblasts, arises from quiescent progenitors (satellite cells) via activation of muscle-specific transcription factors (MyoD, Myf5, myogenin: MYOG, and MRF4). Subsequent to a decline in Pax7, induction in the expression of
Sae-Won Lee et al.
Scientific reports, 5, 16523-16523 (2015-11-14)
Skeletal muscle regeneration occurs continuously to repair muscle damage incurred during normal activity and in chronic disease or injury. Herein, we report that A-kinase anchoring protein 6 (AKAP6) is important for skeletal myoblast differentiation and muscle regeneration. Compared with unstimulated
Majid Rasool Kamli et al.
Biochemical and biophysical research communications, 450(4), 1291-1296 (2014-07-06)
Aldehyde oxidases (AOXs), which catalyze the hydroxylation of heterocycles and oxidation of a wide variety of aldehydic compounds, have been present throughout evolution from bacteria to humans. While humans have only a single functional aldehyde oxidase (AOX1) gene, rodents are

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