Anti-KCTD10 antibodies are used in the immunodetection of the protein potassium channel tetramerization domain containing 10. In humans, the canonical protein has a reported length of 313 amino acid residues and a mass of 35.4 kDa. Its subcellular localization is in the nucleus. Up to 3 different isoforms have been reported for this protein. It is notably widely expressed in many tissue types. A member of the BACURD protein family, KCTD10 is reported to be a substrate-specific adapter of a BCR (BTB-CUL3-RBX1) E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase complex. Synonyms for this target antigen include BTB/POZ domain-containing protein KCTD10, potassium channel tetramerisation domain containing 10, potassium channel tetramerization domain-containing protein 10, and BTB/POZ domain-containing adapter for CUL3-mediated RhoA degradation protein 3. KCTD10 gene orthologs have been reported in the mouse, rat, bovine, frog, zebrafish, chimpanzee and chicken species. A number of KCTD10 antibodies have been mentioned in research publications and have associated citations. These antibodies are most commonly used in Western Blot experiments, among other applications.