Anti-DBND antibodies enable researchers to detect and measure the DBND antigen in biological samples. This target is a reported synonym of the DTNBP1 gene, which encodes dystrobrevin binding protein 1. This protein is known to function in cytoskeleton organization and brain development, among other biological roles. The human version of DBND has a canonical amino acid length of 351 residues and a protein mass of 39.5 kilodaltons. It is reported to be localized in the cell membrane, nucleus, cytoplasmic vesicles, ER, and cytoplasm of cells and widely expressed in many tissue types. DBND is a member of the Dysbindin protein family.