Rhod-2, AM, permeable a las células
Rhod-2, AM, permeable a las células
Invitrogen™

Rhod-2, AM, permeable a las células

Los indicadores de calcio marcados son moléculas que presentan un aumento de la fluorescencia al unirse a Ca2+. Tienen usosMás información
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Número de catálogoCantidad
R1245MP20 x 50 μg
R12441mg
Número de catálogo R1245MP
Precio (USD)
978,03
Each
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Cantidad:
20 x 50 μg
Precio (USD)
978,03
Each
Añadir al carro de la compra
Los indicadores de calcio marcados son moléculas que presentan un aumento de la fluorescencia al unirse a Ca2+. Tienen usos en muchas investigaciones de señalización de calcio, incluyendo la medición de Ca2+ en células y tejidos que tienen altos niveles de autofluorescencia y también para detectar la liberación de Ca2+ generada por fotorreceptores y quelantes fotoactivables. Las células se pueden cargar como éster AM de estos indicadores calcio mediante la adición del indicador disuelto directamente a las placas que contienen las células cultivadas. La señal de fluorescencia de estas células se mide generalmente mediante microscopía de fluorescencia.

Especificaciones del indicador de calcio (éster AM):
• Etiqueta (Ex/Em de forma unida a Ca2+): Rhod-2 (552/581 nm)
• Aumento de la intensidad de fluorescencia al unirse con Ca2+: >100 veces
• Kd para Ca2+ en ausencia de Mg2+, en tampón: ∼570 nM
• Presentan un aumento de la fluorescencia al unirse a Ca2+ con poco cambio en la longitud de onda


Uso de TPEN para controlar cationes de metales pesados
Además, los indicadores basados en BAPTA, como estos, se unen a varios cationes de metales pesados (por ejemplo, Mn2+, Zn2+, Pb2+) con mucha mayor afinidad que a Ca2+. Las perturbaciones en las mediciones de calcio causadas por la presencia de estos iones pueden controlarse usando el quelante seleccionador de metales pesados TPEN.

Más opciones para indicadores de calcio fluorescentes
Ofrecemos una amplia selección de indicadores de calcio Molecular Probes™ para su uso en diversos escenarios experimentales, por ejemplo, versiones de dextrano para reducir las fugas y la compartimentación, y conjugados BAPTA para detectar perturbaciones transitorias de calcio de gran amplitud. Para obtener más información, consulte Fluorescent Ca2+ Indicators Excited with Visible Light—Section 19.3 (Indicadores de Ca2+ fluorescentes excitados mediante luz visible, sección 19.3) en el manual de Molecular Probes™.

Para obtener información sobre indicadores de Ca2+ excitables mediante UV, indicadores de Ca2+ basados en proteínas, conjugados de indicadores de Ca2+ e indicadores basados en fluorescencia de otros iones metálicos (es decir, Mg2+, Zn2+) consulte Indicators for Ca2+, Mg2+, Zn2+ and Other Metal Ions—Chapter 19 (Indicadores para Ca2+, Mg2+, Zn2+ y otros iones metálicos, capítulo 19) en el manual de Molecular Probes™.

Para uso exclusivo en investigación. No apto para uso diagnóstico o terapéutico en humanos ni en animales.
Para uso exclusivo en investigación. No apto para uso en procedimientos diagnósticos.
Especificaciones
Método de detecciónFluorescente
Tipo de coloranteA base de colorantes fluorescentes
Cantidad20 x 50 μg
Condiciones de envíoTemperatura ambiente
Para utilizar con (aplicación)Viabilidad y proliferación celulares
Para utilizar con (equipo)Microscopio de fluorescencia
Tipo de productoTinción
Unit SizeEach
Contenido y almacenamiento
Almacenar en el congelador de -5 °C a -30 °C y proteger de la luz.

Preguntas frecuentes

What are the excitation/emission maxima for Rhod-2, AM, cell permeant (Cat. No. R1244, R1245MP)?

Rhod-2, AM, cell permeant (Cat. No. R1244, R1245MP) exhibits >100-fold increase in fluorescence intensity upon binding Ca2+. The excitation/emission maxima for Rhod-2, AM, cell permeant when bound to Ca2+ are 552/581 nm.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Cell Analysis Support Center.

What cellular processes can be analyzed with a flow cytometer?

-Calcium flux: Each of the Oregon Green calcium indicators binds intracellular calcium with increasing affinity, providing a sensitivity range to match many applications. Oregon Green probes emit green fluorescence at resting levels of Ca2+ and increase their fluorescence intensity 14-fold with increasing Ca2+ concentration. The cell-permeant formulation (Cat. No. O6807) can be loaded in cell media and is compatible with flow cytometry.
-Rhodamine-based calcium indicators comprise a range of probes for large or small changes in Ca2+ concentration. They exhibit a 50-fold increase in fluorescence upon calcium binding and offer a range of wavelengths that can be used in conjunction with GFP or green-fluorescent dyes for multiplexing. Rhod-2, AM (Cat. No. R1245MP), in particular, localizes to mitochondria and can be used with flow cytometry.
-Membrane potential: A distinctive feature of the early stages of apoptosis is the disruption of the mitochondria, including changes in membrane and redox potential. We offer a range of products specifically designed to assay mitochondrial membrane potential in live cells by flow cytometry, with minimal disruption of cellular function. The MitoProbe family of mitochondrial stains (Cat. Nos. M34150, M34151, and M34152) provide quick, easy, and reliable flow cytometric detection of the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential that occurs during apoptosis. MitoTracker dyes (Cat. Nos. M7510 and M7512) are membrane potential-dependent probes for staining mitochondria in live cells. The staining pattern of MitoTracker dyes is retained throughout subsequent flow cytometry immunocytochemistry, DNA end labeling, in situ hybridization, or counterstaining steps. The Mitochondrial Permeability Transition Pore Assay (Cat. No. M34153) provides a more direct method of measuring mitochondrial permeability transition pore opening than assays relying on mitochondrial membrane potential alone. The mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP) is a non-specific channel formed by components from the inner and outer mitochondrial membranes, and appears to be involved in the release of mitochondrial components during cell death.
-Phagocytosis: In phagocytosis, cells internalize particulate matter such as microorganisms, and this process is important for immune responses and during the clearance of apoptotic cells. Probes for studying phagocytosis include BioParticles indicators—bacteria and yeast labeled with fluorescent dyes.
-Tracking phagocytosis using a quench/wash-based assay can report on simple uptake, or a pH indicator can be used to monitor stages in the pathway. We have no-wash assays labeled with pHrodo Red or Green (Cat. Nos. A10010, P35361, P35364, P35365, P35366, and P35367) and no-wash assays for whole blood (Cat. Nos. A10025, A10026, P35381, and P35382), all suitable for flow cytometry.
-pH changes: Sensitive pH determinations can be made in a physiological range using either fluorescent intensity or ratiometric measurements. pHrodo dyes (Cat. Nos. P35373 and P35372) provide signal intensity modulation from pH 2 to pH 9 and with a choice of fluorescent wavelengths. Tracking internalization of fluorescent dextran is a routine method for analyzing pH changes in cellular compartments. Dextran conjugates of pHrodo dyes (Cat. Nos. P35368 and P10361) provide the most complete solution by allowing discrimination of vesicles from early endosomes to lysosomes, with no quench or wash required.
-Reactive oxygen species: Cells that are environmentally stressed usually contain greatly increased levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS). CellROX reagents are fluorogenic probes developed for the detection and quantitation of ROS in live cells. These cell-permeant reagents are non-fluorescent or very weakly fluorescent in the reduced state; however, when oxidized, they become brightly fluorescent and remain localized within the cell. We offer CellROX Green (Cat. No. C10492), CellROX Orange (Cat. No. C10493), and CellROX Deep Red (Cat. No. C10491) Assay Kits validated for flow cytometry.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Cell Analysis Support Center.

Why don't I see a significant change in signal for my live-cell fluorescent indicator dye?

Regardless of the type of live-cell indicator dye (e.g., calcium indicators, pH indicator, metal ion indicators), make sure there is no serum during the loading step, which can prematurely cleave dyes with AM esters and bind dyes non-specifically. Always optimize the dye concentration and staining time with a positive control before you run your test samples, to give the best signal-to-background. Always run a positive control with a buffer containing free ions of known concentration and an ionophore to open pores to those ions (for instance, for calcium indicators like Fluo-4 AM, this would include a buffer with added calcium combined with calcimycin, or for pH indicators, buffers of different pHs combined with nigericin). Reactive oxygen indicators, such as CellROX Green or H2DCFDA would require a cellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) stimulant as a positive control, such as menadione. Finally, make sure your imaging system has a sensitive detector. Plate readers, for instance, have much lower detector efficiency over background, compared to microscopy or flow cytometry.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Cell Analysis Support Center.

Citations & References (148)

Citations & References
Abstract
Functional implications of calcium permeability of the channel formed by pannexin 1.
Authors:Vanden Abeele F,Bidaux G,Gordienko D,Beck B,Panchin YV,Baranova AV,Ivanov DV,Skryma R,Prevarskaya N
Journal:The Journal of cell biology
PubMed ID:16908669
Although human pannexins (PanX) are homologous to gap junction molecules, their physiological function in vertebrates remains poorly understood. Our results demonstrate that overexpression of PanX1 results in the formation of Ca(2+)-permeable gap junction channels between adjacent cells, thus, allowing direct intercellular Ca(2+) diffusion and facilitating intercellular Ca(2+) wave propagation. More ... More
Spatially organised mitochondrial calcium uptake through a novel pathway in chick neurones.
Authors:Coatesworth W, Bolsover S
Journal:Cell Calcium
PubMed ID:16338004
'A brief depolarisation of chick sensory neurones evokes a calcium increase in mitochondria that peaks 1-2s after the depolarisation event and then decays over tens of seconds. Peripheral mitochondria take up more calcium than do central ones, even when the cytosolic calcium increase is spatially homogeneous. The calcium influx into ... More
Feedback inhibition of sodium/calcium exchange by mitochondrial calcium accumulation.
Authors:Opuni K, Reeves JP
Journal:J Biol Chem
PubMed ID:10801871
'Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing the bovine cardiac Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger were subjected to two periods of 5 and 3 min, respectively, during which the extracellular Na(+) concentration ([Na(+)](o)) was reduced to 20 mm; these intervals were separated by a 5-min recovery period at 140 mm Na(+)(o). The cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration ... More
Hydrolysis of Ca2+-sensitive fluorescent probes by perfused rat heart.
Authors:Scaduto RC, Grotyohann LW
Journal:Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
PubMed ID:14561682
'Rat hearts were loaded with the fluorescent calcium indicators fura 2, indo 1, rhod 2, or fluo 3 to determine cytosolic calcium levels in the perfused rat heart. With fura 2, however, basal tissue fluorescence increased above anticipated levels, suggesting accumulation of intermediates of fura 2-AM deesterification. To examine this ... More
Nitric oxide-dependent mitochondrial biogenesis generates Ca2+ signaling profile of lupus T cells.
Authors:Nagy G, Barcza M, Gonchoroff N, Phillips PE, Perl A
Journal:J Immunol
PubMed ID:15356113
'Abnormal T cell activation and cell death underlie the pathology of systemic lupus erythematosus. Although mitochondrial hyperpolarization (MHP) represents an early and reversible checkpoint of T cell activation and apoptosis, lupus T cells exhibit persistent MHP. NO has recently been recognized as a key signal of mitochondrial biogenesis and mediator ... More