Recombination activating gene 2(RAG2) is core part of the RAG complex(RAG1 and RAG2), which mediates the DNA cleavage phase during V(D)J recombination. The RAG complex also plays a role in pre-B cell allelic exclusion, a process leading to expression of a single immunoglobulin heavy chain allele to enforce clonality and monospecific recognition by the B-cell antigen receptor (BCR) expressed on individual B-lymphocytes. The introduction of DNA breaks by the RAG complex on one immunoglobulin allele induces ATM-dependent repositioning of the other allele to pericentromeric heterochromatin, preventing accessibility to the RAG complex and recombination of the second allele. In the RAG complex, RAG2 is not the catalytic component but is required for all known catalytic activities mediated by RAG1. It probably acts as a sensor of chromatin state that recruits the RAG complex to H3K4me3
Western Blot:A375 Cells, 1:200-1:1000; IHC: Human Lymphoma Tissue, 1:20-1:200; IF: Hela Cells, 1:10-1:100; FC: HeLa Cells, N/A
Type: Primary
Antigen: RAG2
Clonality: Polyclonal
Clone:
Conjugation: Unconjugated
Epitope:
Host: Rabbit
Isotype: IgG
Reactivity: Human, Mouse