Kit de tampones de reacción celular Click-iT™
Kit de tampones de reacción celular Click-iT™
Invitrogen™

Kit de tampones de reacción celular Click-iT™

Green features
El kit de tampones para células Click-iT® proporciona a los investigadores que tienen células etiquetadas con una azida o unMás información
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Número de catálogoCantidad
C102691 Kit
Número de catálogo C10269
Precio (CLP)
392.890
Each
Añadir al carro de la compra
Cantidad:
1 Kit
Precio (CLP)
392.890
Each
Añadir al carro de la compra
El kit de tampones para células Click-iT® proporciona a los investigadores que tienen células etiquetadas con una azida o un alquino y el reactivo de detección de clic correspondiente con los medios necesarios para unir estas dos porciones. Cada kit incluye material suficiente para realizar 50 reacciones a partir de un volumen de reacción de 0,5 ml para posteriormente realizar análisis por citometría de flujo, microscopía de fluorescencia o adquisición de imágenes de alto rendimiento (HCS).
Para uso exclusivo en investigación. No apto para uso en procedimientos diagnósticos.
Especificaciones
Para utilizar con (equipo)EdU, AHA Click-It™, azida Alexa Fluor™, alquino Alexa Fluor™, GlcNAz Click-iT™, Click-iT™
Características ecológicasMenos peligroso
Línea de productosClick-iT, Sondas moleculares
Tipo de productoKit de tampones de reacción celular
Cantidad1 Kit
Condiciones de envíoTemperatura ambiente
Unit SizeEach
Contenido y almacenamiento
Un kit que contiene material suficiente para 50 reacciones a partir de un volumen de reacción de 0,5 ml.
Almacenar entre 2 y 6 °C.

Preguntas frecuentes

What are the main characteristics of a Click-iT reaction?

Click reactions have several general characteristics: the reaction is efficient, no extreme temperatures or solvents are required, the reaction is complete within 30 minutes, the components of the reaction are bio-inert, and perhaps most importantly, no side reactions occur-the label and detection tags react selectively and specifically with one another. This final point is a key advantage of this powerful detection technique; it is possible to apply click chemistry-labeled molecules to complex biological samples and detect them with unprecedented sensitivity due to the extremely low background of the reaction.

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

I am observing no signal or very low specific signal for my click-labeled samples. What can I do to improve the signal?

The click reaction is only effective when copper is in the appropriate valency. Azides and alkynes will not react with each other without copper. Make sure that the click reaction mixture is used immediately after preparation when the copper (II) concentration is at its highest.
Do not use additive buffer that has turned yellow; it must be colorless to be active.
Cells need to be adequately fixed and permeabilized for the TdT enzyme and click reagents to have access to the nucleus. Tissue samples require digestion with proteinase K or other proteolytic enzymes for sufficient TdT access.
Some reagents can bind copper and reduce its effective concentration available to catalyze the click reaction. Do not include any metal chelator (e.g., EDTA, EGTA, citrate, etc.) in any buffer or reagent prior to the click reaction. Avoid buffers or reagents that include other metal ions that may be o xidized or reduced. It may be help to include extra wash steps on the cell or tissue sample before performing the click reaction.
You can repeat the click reaction with fresh reagents to try to improve signal. Increasing the click reaction time longer than 30 minutes will not improve a low signal. Performing a second, 30 minute incubation with fresh click reaction reagents is more effective at improving labeling.
Your cells may not be apoptotic. Prepare a DNase I-treated positive control to verify that the TdT enzymatic reaction and click labeling reaction are working correctly.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Labeling Chemistry Support Center.

I am observing high non-specific background when I image my Click-iT EdU TUNEL-labeled samples. What is causing this and what can I do to reduce the background?

The click reaction is very selective between an azide and alkyne. No other side reactions are possible in a biological system. Any non-specific background is due to non-covalent binding of the dye to various cellular components. The Select FX Signal Enhancer is not effective at reducing non-specific charge-based binding of dyes following the click reaction; we do not recommend its use with the Click-iT detection reagents. The best method to reduce background is to increase the number of BSA washes. You should always do a no-dye or no-click reaction control under the same processing and detection conditions to verify that the background is actually due to the dye and not autofluorescence. You should also perform the complete click reaction on a no-TdT enzyme control sample to verify the specificity of the click reaction signal.

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

I notice that when I post-stain my cells with DAPI after performing the click reaction to detect EdU incorporation, my DAPI signal is lower compared to my no-click reaction control samples. What causes the reduction in DAPI signal?

The copper in the click reaction denatures DNA to a small extent (although not as much as is required for efficient BrdU detection), which can affect the binding affinity of DNA dyes including DAPI and Hoechst stain. This effect should only be apparent with the classic EdU kits and not the Click-iT Plus EdU kits, which use a lower copper concentration.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Cell Viability, Proliferation, Cryopreservation, and Apoptosis Support Center.

I am observing no signal or very low signal for my click-labeled samples. What can I do to improve the signal?

The click reaction is only effective when copper is in the appropriate valency. Except for the DIBO alkyne-azide reaction, azides and alkynes will not react with each other without copper. Make sure that the click reaction mixture is used immediately after preparation when the copper (II) concentration is at its highest.
Do not use additive buffer that has turned yellow; it must be colorless to be active.
Cells need to be adequately fixed and permeabilized for the click reagents to have access to intracellular components that have incorporated the click substrate(s).
Some reagents can bind copper and reduce its effective concentration available to catalyze the click reaction. Do not include any metal chelator (e.g., EDTA, EGTA, citrate, etc.) in any buffer or reagent prior to the click reaction. Avoid buffers or reagents that include other metal ions that may be oxidized or reduced. It may be help to include extra wash steps on the cell or tissue sample before performing the click reaction.
You can repeat the click reaction with fresh reagents to try to improve signal. Increasing the click reaction time longer than 30 minutes will not improve a low signal. Performing a second, 30 minute incubation with fresh click reaction reagents is more effective at improving labeling.
Low signal can also be due to low incorporation of EdU, EU, or other click substrates. Other click substrates (e.g., AHA, HPG, palmitic acid, azide, etc.) incorporated into cellular components may have been lost if not adequately cross-linked in place or if the wrong fixative was used. For click substrates that are incorporated into the membrane or lipids, you should avoid the use of alcohol or acetone fixatives and permeabilizing agents.
The incorporated click substrate must be accessible at the time of the click reaction; labeling of incorporated amino acid analogs may be lower in native proteins relative to denatured proteins.
You may need to optimize the metabolic labeling conditions including analog incubation time or concentration. Cells that are healthy, not too high of a passage number and not too crowded may incorporate the analog better. You may create a positive control by including extra doses of the click substrate during multiple time points during an incubation time that spans or closely spans the doubling time of the cell type of interest.

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

Citations & References (1)

Citations & References
Abstract
New strategy for synthesis of mercaptoundecahydrododecaborate derivatives via click chemistry: possible boron carriers and visualization in cells for neutron capture therapy.
Authors:El-Zaria ME, Nakamura H,
Journal:Inorg Chem
PubMed ID:19928788
'A new method that utilizes the click cycloaddition reaction to functionalize B(12)H(11)SH(2-) (BSH) with organic molecules was investigated. S,S-Dipropargyl-SB(12)H(11)(-) (1) and S-propargyl-SB(12)H(11)(2-) (4) were prepared from [(CH(3))(4)N](2)B(12)H(11)SH and [(CH(3))(4)N](2)B(12)H(11)S(CH(2))(2)CN (2) with propargyl bromide, respectively. Compound 1 or 4 reacted with various azides with mediation by Cu(II) ascorbate to give the ... More