Biological Description

Specificity SOCS2 Antibody (Rabbit mAb) [H21H24] detects endogenous levels of total SOCS2 protein.
Background SOCS2 is a cytokine‑inducible member of the suppressor of cytokine signaling family that functions as the substrate‑recognition subunit of a Cullin‑5–RING E3 ubiquitin ligase (ECS/CRL5) complex, where it negatively regulates JAK–STAT signaling by targeting activated cytokine and growth hormone receptors for ubiquitin‑dependent degradation. The protein contains a central SH2 domain that binds phosphotyrosine motifs on ligand‑activated receptors or associated kinases, and a C‑terminal SOCS box that recruits Elongin B/C, Cullin‑5 and Rbx2 to assemble a functional ubiquitin ligase, establishing a modular architecture that couples phospho‑dependent substrate recognition to proteasomal turnover. In growth hormone signaling, SOCS2 is strongly induced by GH and docks via its SH2 domain onto phosphorylated tyrosines within the intracellular tail of the growth hormone receptor after JAK2 activation; the assembled ECS(SOCS2) complex ubiquitinates GHR and promotes its internalization and degradation, forming a feedback loop that limits receptor abundance, constrains downstream STAT5 activation and shapes IGF‑1–related somatic growth. SOCS2 similarly recognizes JAK2‑phosphorylated erythropoietin receptor and catalyzes its ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation, attenuating erythropoietin‑induced JAK–STAT signaling and contributing to control of erythroid proliferation and survival. Structural work on SOCS2–elongin C–elongin B complexes shows how the SH2 domain and SOCS box are positioned to accommodate phosphopeptide substrates while maintaining stable association with the Elongin BC–Cullin‑5 module, clarifying how substrate binding and ligase assembly are integrated into a single compact scaffold that guides CRL5 specificity. Beyond GH and EPO pathways, SOCS2 binds IGF‑1 receptor and other cytokine receptors, and review data indicate that SOCS2 modulates multiple JAK–STAT‑dependent networks in metabolism, central nervous system function, immune responses and mammary gland biology, so SOCS2 levels and activity influence diverse physiological processes through control of receptor density and signaling intensity. Dysregulation of SOCS2—through loss‑of‑function mutations, altered expression or perturbed post‑translational modification, has been linked to abnormal somatic growth via enhanced GH/IGF‑1 signaling, heightened inflammatory responses of macrophages to Toll‑like receptor ligands, and associations with cancer, insulin resistance and cardiovascular disease, consistent with its role as a central brake on cytokine and growth factor signaling.

Usage Information

Application WB, IP, IF Dilution
WB IP IF FCM
1:1000 - 1:10000 1:10 - 1:100 1:100 - 1:250 1:150
Reactivity Human
Source Rabbit Monoclonal Antibody MW 22 kDa
Storage Buffer PBS, pH 7.2+50% Glycerol+0.05% BSA+0.01% NaN3
Storage
(from the date of receipt)
-20°C (avoid freeze-thaw cycles), 2 years

References

  • https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21980433/
  • https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26709655/

Application Data