Providing functional, high-purity recombinant proteins—including membrane proteins and nanodiscs—to overcome bottlenecks in drug screening and target validation.
Harness the power of protein degraders for precise protein degradation, expanding druggable targets and enhancing therapeutic effectiveness for cutting-edge drug discovery.
RNA design, synthesis, and manufacturing—covering mRNA, saRNA, circRNA, and RNAi. Fast turnaround, rigorous QC, and seamless transition from research to GMP production.
Balancing accuracy, accessibility, affordability, and rapid detection to safeguard public health and strengthen global response to infectious diseases.
Stable expression over 15 generations with rapid cell line development in just 3 months. Supports adherent and suspension cell lines, offering MCB, WCB, and PCB establishment.
Scalable mRNA production from milligrams to grams, with personalized process design for sequence optimization, cap selection, and nucleotide modifications, all in one service.
Leverage AI to uncover hidden high-potential small molecules, prioritize leads intelligently, and reduce costly trial-and-error in early drug discovery.
The protein encoded by this gene belongs to the antizyme inhibitor family, which plays a role in cell growth and proliferation by maintaining polyamine homeostasis within the cell. Antizyme inhibitors are homologs of ornithine decarboxylase (ODC, the key enzyme in polyamine biosynthesis) that have lost the ability to decarboxylase ornithine; however, retain the ability to bind to antizymes. Antizymes negatively regulate intracellular polyamine levels by binding to ODC and targeting it for degradation, as well as by inhibiting polyamine uptake. Antizyme inhibitors function as positive regulators of polyamine levels by sequestering antizymes and neutralizing their effect. This gene encodes one of two copies of antizyme inhibitor 1 in zebrafish. It is expressed in embryos and adult fish and may have a role in zebrafish development. [provided by RefSeq, May 2015]