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CC-209

BHMT2 Easy KO Kit

For research use only. Not intended for any clinical use.

Cat. No. :   CC-209

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Product Information

Gene Information

Cat. No. CC-209
Description A complete kit for efficient gene knockout in mammalian cells, combining chemically synthesized sgRNAs with Cas9 RNPs to induce targeted DNA cleavage and generate frameshift mutations or deletions. All essential reagents for transfection and knockout validation are included for rapid, high-efficiency gene disruption.
Gene Abbr BHMT2
Species Human
Ensembl ID ENSG00000132840
NCBIGene ID 23743
Uni Prot ID Q9H2M3
Features
  • All-in-One workflow from gene editing to knockout validation for users with no prior experience.
  • Pre-validated sgRNAs and primers for rapid setup.
  • Streamlined experiment handling.
  • CRISPR RNP method ensures precise and efficient gene knockout.
Applications This kit enables in vitro gene knockout in human-derived cells using chemically synthesized sgRNAs and Cas9-gRNA RNP complexes. Transfected RNPs cleave early exons of the target gene, inducing deletions or frameshift mutations for efficient and rapid knockout.
Reactions 5–10 reactions per target gene
Kit Components 2–3 chemically synthesized sgRNAs (200pmol each)
3 PCR/Sequencing primers (500pmol each)
LM cell lysate (500µL)
Cas9 protein (12µg)
LM RNP transfection reagent (50µL)
Storage Store at -80°C for up to 1 year or at -20°C for up to 6 months. Avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles.
Target Gene BHMT2
Background Homocysteine is a sulfur-containing amino acid that plays a crucial role in methylation reactions. Transfer of the methyl group from betaine to homocysteine creates methionine, which donates the methyl group to methylate DNA, proteins, lipids, and other intracellular metabolites. The protein encoded by this gene is one of two methyl transferases that can catalyze the transfer of the methyl group from betaine to homocysteine. Anomalies in homocysteine metabolism have been implicated in disorders ranging from vascular disease to neural tube birth defects such as spina bifida. Alternatively spliced transcript variants encoding different isoforms have been found for this gene. [provided by RefSeq, May 2010]
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