Search Thermo Fisher Scientific
Adhesion to extracellular matrix regulates cell survival through both integrin engagement and appropriate cell spreading. Anoikis is the molecular mechanism of apop-tosis induced by integrin detachment. Amino-terminal enhancer of split (AES) is a member of the Groucho/ transducin-like enhancer of split (TLE) family of transcriptional regulators, a group of transcriptional co-repressors that play important roles in neurogenesis, segmentation, and sex determination. AES forms a complex with Bit1 (Bcl-2 inhibitor of transcription 1), a mitochondrial protein that is released into the cytoplasm upon onset of apoptosis. It has been suggested that this complex turns off a survival-promoting gene transcription program controlled by the TLE protein family. Interestingly, apoptosis of cells transfected with AES and Bit1 could be inhibited if the cells were allowed to attach to fibronectin through the alpha5beta1 integrin suggesting that the Bit1-AES pathway contributing to anoikis is regulated by integrins, and in particular, the alpha5beta1 integrin.
Aes; AES-1; AES-2; AL024115; Amino enhancer of split; amino-terminal enhancer of split; Esp1; gp130-associated protein GAM; Grg; Grg5; Grg-5; Groucho-related protein 5; Protein ESP1; Protein GRG; related to Drosophila groucho; R-esp1; TLE family member 5; TLE family member 5, transcriptional modulator; TLE family member 5; amino-terminal enhancer of split; TLE5
100 µL
100 µg
100 µg
100 µg
100 µL
100 µL
100 µg
100 µL
100 µL
50 µg
100 µL