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Recombinant Human Biotinidase/BTD Protein, CF

R&D Systems, part of Bio-Techne | Catalog # 7839-BT

R&D Systems, part of Bio-Techne
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7839-BT-010

Key Product Details

Source

CHO

Accession #

Conjugate

Unconjugated

Applications

Enzyme Activity

Product Specifications

Source

Chinese Hamster Ovary cell line, CHO-derived human Biotinidase/BTD protein
Ala42-Asp543, with a C-terminal 6-His tag

Purity

>95%, by SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions and visualized by Colloidal Coomassie® Blue stain at 5 μg per lane.

Endotoxin Level

<1.0 EU per 1 μg of the protein by the LAL method.

N-terminal Sequence Analysis

Ala42

Predicted Molecular Mass

58 kDa

SDS-PAGE

65-80 kDa, reducing conditions

Activity

Measured by its ability to hydrolyze the substrate biotin 4-Nitrophenyl ester (BNP).
The specific activity is >190 pmol/min/μg, as measured under the described conditions.

Formulation, Preparation and Storage

7839-BT
Formulation Supplied as a 0.2 μm filtered solution in NaH2PO4, NaCl, EDTA and DTT.
Shipping The product is shipped with dry ice or equivalent. Upon receipt, store it immediately at the temperature recommended below.
Stability & Storage Use a manual defrost freezer and avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles.
  • 6 months from date of receipt, -70 °C as supplied.
  • 3 months, -70 °C under sterile conditions after opening.

Background: Biotinidase/BTD

Biotinidase (BTD) is a member of the nitrilase superfamily, which consists of 12 families of nitrilases, amidases, carbamylases, and N‑acyltrasferases (1). It is a thiol hydrolase releasing biotin from biotinamide, biotin‑lysine, biotin‑peptide conjugates and biotin methylester. It is expressed in most mammalian tissues, with high activity being present in liver, kidney, serum, intestine, and adrenal glands (2). BTD with two other proteins, sodium-dependent multivitamin transporter, and holocarboxylase synthetase, play major roles in the homeostasis of biotin (3). BTD contributes to the homeostasis through the intestinal release of free biotin from digested biotin‑containing proteins and plasma transport and the recycling of biotin from breakdown products of biotinylated carboxylases. BTD deficiency can lead to a decrease in biotin bioavailability due to failure in releasing biotin from dietary proteins. It can be caused by gene mutations or from decreased secretion of BTD into the intestinal lumen (4). A recent study indicates that the BTD level in human plasma is a potential biomarker for the detection of breast cancer (5).

References

  1. Pace, H. C. and C. Brenner (2001) Genome. Biol. 2:reviews/0001.1.
  2. Chauhan, J. and K. Dakshinamurt (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261:4286.
  3. Wolf, B. (2005) J Nur Biochem. 16:441.
  4. Zempleni, J. et al. (2008) Expert Rev Endocrinol Metab. 3:715.
  5. Kang, U. B. et al. (2010) BMC Cancer 10:114.

Alternate Names

Biotinase, BTD

Entrez Gene IDs

686 (Human); 26363 (Mouse); 306262 (Rat)

Gene Symbol

BTD

UniProt

Additional Biotinidase/BTD Products

Product Documents for Recombinant Human Biotinidase/BTD Protein, CF

Certificate of Analysis

To download a Certificate of Analysis, please enter a lot number in the search box below.

Note: Certificate of Analysis not available for kit components.

Product Specific Notices for Recombinant Human Biotinidase/BTD Protein, CF

For research use only

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