Antibodies under a microscope

40010-R111

Influenza A H1N1 (A/Puerto Rico/8/34/Mount Sinai) Matrix protein 1 / M1 Protein 1 Antibody, Rabbit MAb

Description

The Influenza virus matrix protein 1 (M1) is a matrix protein of the influenza virus. M1 protein has been shown to play a crucial role in virus replication, assembly, and budding. It forms a coat inside the viral envelope. This is a bifunctional membrane/RNA-binding protein that mediates the encapsidation of RNA-nucleoprotein cores into the membrane envelope. M1 consists of two domains connected by a linker sequence. The N-terminal domain has a multi-helical structure. The C-terminal domain also contains an alpha-helical structure. The M1 protein is the most abundant structural protein in influenza A virus particles. M1 protein of the influenza A virus plays multiple roles in virion assembly and infection. M1 protein was a candidate antigen for a broad-spectrum influenza virus vaccine and the adjuvant chitosan significantly improved the efficacy of the M1 vaccine.

Target

M1

Target Alias Name

M1

Isotype/Mimetic

Rabbit IgG

Animal-Derived Biomaterials Used

No

Sequence Available

No

Original Discovery Method

Phage display technology

Antibody/Binder Origins

Animal-dependent discovery (in vitro display, OR immunisation pre-2020), In vitro recombinant expression