Nuclear Receptors
Nuclear hormone receptors (nuclear receptors) are specialised transcription factors which bind to specific sequences of DNA of particular target genes. They regulate transcription of these target genes in response to a variety of endogenous ligands. Nuclear receptors are classified into two major subfamilies: steroid and non-steroid hormone receptors. Steroid hormone receptors include receptors for estrogen (ER), androgen, glucocorticoid, mineralocorticoid and progesterone. Examples of non-steroid hormone receptors include thyroid receptors, retinoic acid receptors and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPAR). Researchers can save up to 50% on nuclear hormone receptor agonists, antagonists and modulators from Hello Bio - they are up to half the price of other suppliers.
Calphostin C (HB0160)
Description:Potent, selective PKC inhibitor. Also antagonizes the Tcf/β-catenin complex
Purity:>95%
ICG 001 (HB0331)
Description:Selective, competitive inhibitor of β-catenin/CBP interaction
Purity:>98%
IWP 2 (HB0344)
Description:Potent Wnt pathway inhibitor and PORCN inhibitor. Suppresses R1 ESC self-renewal. Used in the production of cardiac organoids.
Purity:>98%
IWP 4 (HB3066)
Description:Potent Wnt/β-catenin signaling inhibitor. Induces cardiomyocyte differentiation of hESCs and iPSCs.
Purity:>98%
Pioglitazone hydrochloride (HB2554)
Description:Selective PPARγ agonist. Enhances mESCs proliferation and survival.
Purity:>99%
PNU 74654 (HB0528)
Description:β-catenin inhibitor. Wnt pathway inhibitor. Promotes neural differentiation of hPSCs.
Purity:>99%