Novus Biologicals products are now on bio-techne.com

5-HT3A Products

Antibodies
5-HT3A Antibody
5-HT3A Antibody
NB100-56351
Species: Hu, Mu, Rt
Applications: WB, Simple Western, IHC
Host: Rabbit Polyclonal
5-HT3A Antibody
5-HT3A Antibody
NB100-41382
Species: Hu, Mu, Rt
Applications: ELISA, Flow, IHC
Host: Goat Polyclonal
5-HT3A Antibody (3B11C10) - B ...
5-HT3A Antibody (3B11C10) - BSA Free
NBP2-61781
Species: Hu
Applications: WB, ELISA, Flow, ICC/IF, IHC
Host: Mouse Monoclonal
Formulation Catalog # Availability Price  
Lysates
5-HT3A Overexpression Lysate
5-HT3A Overexpression Lysate
NBL1-11779
Species: Hu
Applications: WB
5-HT3A Overexpression Lysate
5-HT3A Overexpression Lysate
NBP2-11164
Species: Hu
Applications: WB
Proteins
5-HT3A Recombinant Protein An ...
5-HT3A Recombinant Protein Antigen
NBP2-68884PEP
Species: Hu
Applications: AC

Description

The product of this gene belongs to the ligand-gated ion channel receptor superfamily. This gene encodes subunit A of the type 3 receptor for 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin), a biogenic hormone that functions as a neurotransmitter, a hormone, and a mitogen. This receptor causes fast, depolarizing responses in neurons after activation. It appears that the heteromeric combination of A and B subunits is necessary to provide the full functional features of this receptor, since either subunit alone results in receptors with very low conductance and response amplitude. Alternatively spliced transcript variants encoding different isoforms have been identified.

Bioinformatics

Entrez Mouse
Human
Rat
Uniprot Human
Human
Human
Human
Rat
Product By Gene ID 3359
Alternate Names
  • 5-HT-3,5-HT3-A
  • 5-HT3R5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 3A
  • 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) receptor 3A
  • 5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 3,5-HT3A5HT3R
  • HTR35HT3 serotonin receptor
  • Serotonin receptor 3A
  • Serotonin-gated ion channel receptor

Research Areas for 5-HT3A

Find related products by research area and learn more about each of the different research areas below.

Neuronal Cell Markers
Neuroscience
Neurotransmission