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Spot-tag

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Spot-tag is a 12-amino acid peptide tag recognized by a single-domain antibody (sdAb, or nanobody). Due to the small size of a Spot-tag (12 amino acids) and the robust Spot-nanobody (14.7 kD) that specifically binds to Spot-tagged proteins, Spot-tag can be used for multiple capture and detection applications: Immunoprecipitation, affinity purification, immunofluorescence, and super-resolution microscopy.[1] Recombinant proteins can be engineered to express the Spot-tag.

Spot-tag Sequence

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Amino acid sequence

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PDRVRAVSHWSS

Codon optimized DNA sequence

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Human CCA GAC CGC GTG CGC GCC GTG AGC CAT TGG AGC AGC
S. cerevisiae CCA GAT AGA GTT AGA GCT GTT TCT CAT TGG TCT TCT
E. coli CCG GAT CGC GTG CGC GCA GTC TCT CAC TGG AGC AGC

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Virant D, Traenkle B, Maier J, Kaiser PD, Bodenhöfer M, Schmees C, Pisak-Lukáts B, Endesfelder U, Rothbauer U (2018). "A peptide tag-specific nanobody enables high-quality labeling for STORM imaging". Nature Communications. 9 (1): 930. Bibcode:2018NatCo...9..930V. doi:10.1038/s41467-018-03191-2. PMC 5834503. PMID 29500346.