Anti-N-alpha-acetyltransferase 30, NatC catalytic subunit antibodies are used for the immunodetection of the protein encoded by the NAA30 gene. In humans, the canonical protein has a reported length of 362 amino acid residues and a mass of 39.3 kDa. Its subcellular localization is in the nucleus and cytoplasm. Alternative splicing is reported to yield 2 different isoforms for this protein. A member of the Acetyltransferase protein family, it is a known catalytic subunit of the N-terminal acetyltransferase C (NatC) complex. Other names for this target antigen include N-acetyltransferase 12 (GCN5-related, putative), N-acetyltransferase MAK3 homolog, natC catalytic subunit, putative N-acetyltransferase, and N-alpha-acetyltransferase 30. Gene orthologs have been identified in the mouse, rat, bovine, frog, zebrafish, chimpanzee and chicken species.