For research use only
| Cat No. | ABC-X0350C |
| Product Type | Overexpression Stable Cell Lines |
| Cell Type | Lymphocytes |
| Species | Human |
| Host Cell | BAF3 |
| Source Organ | Lymphatic |
| Disease | Normal |
| Storage | Liquid Nitrogen |
Human KIF5B_RET (Y806C) BAF3 Cell Line, KIF5B, BAF3, Overexpression Stable Cell Lines, Transfected Stable Cell Lines
Human KIF5B_RET (Y806C) BAF3 Overexpression Cell Line is a genetically engineered model derived from murine BAF3 pro-B cells based on customers’ requirement. This cell line stably expresses the human KIF5B-RET fusion gene with a Y806C mutation, delivered through lentiviral vector transduction. Gene expression is validated by qRT-PCR and the clone is maintained at low passage numbers (<P20). Target The KIF5B-RET fusion is an oncogenic rearrangement found in lung adenocarcinoma and thyroid carcinoma. The Y806C mutation alters the kinase domain, potentially impacting RET inhibitor sensitivity and downstream oncogenic signaling. AcceGen offers generation of stable overexpression cell lines targeting any gene of your interest. Polyclonal or monoclonal is optional based on customers’ research needs.
| Species | Human |
| Cat.No | ABC-X0350C |
| Product Category | Transfected Stable Cell Lines |
| Size/Quantity | 1 vial |
| Cell Type | Lymphocytes |
| Growth Mode | Suspension |
| Shipping Info | Dry Ice |
| Growth Conditions | 37 °C, 5% CO2 |
| Source Organ | Lymphatic |
| Disease | Normal |
| Biosafety Level | 1 |
| Storage | Liquid Nitrogen |
| Product Type | Overexpression Stable Cell Lines |
| Host Cell | BAF3 |
| Quality Control | All cells test negative for mycoplasma, bacteria, yeast, and fungi. |
This model expresses the Y806C-mutant form of the KIF5B-RET fusion, which may alter kinase activity or drug binding in RET-driven cancers. It supports in-depth studies of RET oncogenic potential, kinase domain mutations, and resistance mechanisms against selective RET inhibitors. The cell line is ideal for high-throughput drug screening and dissecting structure-function relationships in RET signaling.