Anti-N-alpha-acetyltransferase 35, NatC auxiliary subunit antibodies are used for the immunodetection of the protein encoded by the NAA35 gene. In humans, the canonical protein has a reported length of 725 amino acid residues and a mass of 83.6 kDa. Its subcellular localization is in the cytoplasm. Alternative splicing is reported to yield 2 different isoforms for this protein. A member of the MAK10 protein family, it is reported to be an auxillary component of the N-terminal acetyltransferase C (NatC) complex which catalyzes acetylation of N-terminal methionine residues. Other names for this target antigen include corneal wound healing-related protein, embryonic growth-associated protein homolog, protein MAK10 homolog, and MAK10 homolog, amino-acid N-acetyltransferase subunit. Gene orthologs have been identified in the mouse, rat, bovine, frog, zebrafish, chimpanzee and chicken species.