Sondas fluorescentes CellTracker™
Sondas fluorescentes CellTracker™
Invitrogen™

Sondas fluorescentes CellTracker™

Es un colorante fluorescente adecuado para supervisar el movimiento de las células o su ubicación.
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Número de catálogoCantidadTipo de colorante
C21115 mgCellTracker™ Blue CMHC
C21105 mgCellTracker™ Blue CMAC
C128815 mgCellTracker Blue CMF2HC
C3456520 × 15 μgCellTracker™ Deep Red
C702520 x 50 μgCellTracker Green CMFDA
C29251mgCellTracker Green CMFDA
C21025 mgColorantes BODIPY
C3455120 × 50 μgCellTracker Orange CMRA
C29271 mgCellTracker Orange CMTMR
C3455220 × 50 μgCellTracker™ Red CMTPX
C100945 x 0,1 mgThiolTracker™ Violet
Número de catálogo C2111
Precio (CLP)
-
Cantidad:
5 mg
Tipo de colorante:
CellTracker™ Blue CMHC
Cell movement and location studies require specialized probes that are nontoxic to living cells and well retained, allowing for multigenerational tracking. The CellTracker fluorescent probes are available in a range of fluorescent colors to match instrument lasers and filters, and to accommodate co-staining with antibodies or other cell analysis probes. These dyes are excellent tools for monitoring cell movement, location, proliferation, migration, chemotaxis, and invasion.

  • Este colorante se conserva bien, lo que permite el seguimiento multigeneracional de movimientos celulares.
  • Los espectros de excitación/emisión verde (492/517 nm maxima) son ideales para el multiplexing con proteínas y colorantes rojo fluorescente.
  • Fácil de usar: retire el medio, añada el colorante, incube 30 minutos y obtenga la imagen de las células.
  • Retención de la señal fluorescente superior a >72 horas (normalmente de tres a seis generaciones).
  • Baja citotoxicidad: no afecta a la viabilidad ni a la proliferación
  • El tinte fluorescente de CMAC CellTracker Blue se ha diseñado para atravesar libremente las membranas celulares hasta las células donde se transforma en productos de reacción impermeabilizantes de membranas celulares.
  • El colorante se transfiere a las células hijas, pero no a las celdas adyacentes de una población.
  • Estable, no tóxico a las concentraciones de trabajo, bien conservado en las células, y brillante fluorescente a pH fisiológico

Adhesión celular, análisis celular, proliferación celular, marcado y seguimiento celular, viabilidad celular y citotoxicidad, viabilidad celular, proliferación y función, Imágenes celulares, ensayos de toxicología celular, quimiotaxis y migración celular, descubrimiento y desarrollo de fármacos, marcado celular general, detección de glutatión, detección de alto contenido (HCS), inmunofluorescencia (IF), tinción y detección de inmunofluorescencia, señalización y homeostomía, señalización, identificación y señalización Seguimiento microbiano, estrés nitrooxidativo, ensayos ADME/Tox basados en dianas, detección de pH

Para uso exclusivo en investigación. No apto para uso en procedimientos diagnósticos.
Especificaciones
ColorAzul
DescripciónCellTracker™ Blue CMHC Dye, 5 mg
Tipo de coloranteCellTracker™ Blue CMHC
Emisión470 nm
Intervalo de longitud de onda de excitación372 nm
FormularioDry Powder
Línea de productosCellTracker
Cantidad5 mg
Tipo de reactivoCompuestos de seguimiento celular, reactivos de etiquetado celular
Condiciones de envíoTemperatura ambiente
Tipo de etiquetaOtras etiquetas o colorantes
Tipo de productoTinte
SubCellular LocalizationCytoplasm
Unit SizeEach
Contenido y almacenamiento
Almacenar en el congelador de -5 °C a -30 °C y proteger de la luz.

Preguntas frecuentes

I want to do a cell migration study for around 4 hours and need to fluorescently label the cells with a dye. What do you recommend?

Calcein, AM and FDA (fluorescein diaceate) are examples of some dyes used for this application. Since these dyes are not incorporated or covalently attached to any cellular components, they may have a short retention time as some cell types may actively efflux the dye out of the cells. The CellTracker and CellTrace dyes include either a mild thiol-reactive chloromethyl group or amine-reactive succinnimidyl ester group to allow for covalent binding to cellular components, providing for better retention. As with any reagent, one should empirically determine retention times for the cell type used.

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

I labeled my cells with Calcein, AM, but when I imaged the next day, there was no fluorescence from Calcein. Why?

Calcein, AM is a good choice for cell tracking and as a general cytoplasmic stain. However, it doesn't bind to anything and may be actively pumped out of the cells within a couple hours, which is likely what happened. The retention of Calcein within live cells is dependent upon the inherent properties of the cell type and culture conditions.

For long-term imaging, you may wish to consider a reactive cytoplasmic stains such as CFDA, SE or the CellTracker and CellTrace dyes.

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

Can the CellTracker dyes be fixed?

Yes, the CellTracker dyes react with any accessible thiol part of the protein and can be fixed. However, some CellTracker dyes may be attached to small metabolites that can leak from the cell following permeabilization. This can result in decreased fluorescence.

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

I stained two populations of cells, one with CellTracker Green and the other with CellTracker Red, but it looks like there may be crossover of the red dye to the green cells. What is going on?

One possibility is that there is spectral bleedthrough between the dyes. Be sure to check the single-color samples by imaging the red cells in green and imaging the green cells in red, using the optimal imaging settings for the other color. If you see bleedthrough with these controls, then you will have to reduce the dye label concentration to reduce the brightness of the dyes, or choose dyes that are farther apart spectrally. If the issue isn’t bleedthrough, another possibility is that the cells were not adequately washed after staining, allowing some unincorporated dye to remain and label the other cells after they were introduced. Extending washes and wash times should help with this.

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

I'm trying to stain my cells with CellTracker dyes or CFDA SE, but I'm not seeing much signal. What can I do?

First, make sure you aren’t staining in the presence of serum, since serum can have esterase activity that can prematurely cleave the AM group on these dyes, preventing entry into cells. After staining, it’s okay to return the cells to medium containing serum. After this, you can try increasing the concentration and label time to get a higher intensity.

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

Citations & References (6)

Citations & References
Abstract
Na(+)-dependent, fluoxetine-sensitive serotonin uptake by astrocytes tissue-printed from rat cerebral cortex.
Authors:Dave V, Kimelberg HK
Journal:J Neurosci
PubMed ID:8046464
Previous studies have established that rat primary astrocyte cultures prepared from several brain regions of 1-4-d-old rats exhibit high-affinity, Na(+)-dependent and fluoxetine-sensitive serotonin (5-HT) uptake with a Km for 5-HT of 0.4 microM and a Ki for fluoxetine of 23 nM, which correspond to the characteristics for this transport for ... More
Snd3 controls nucleus-vacuole junctions in response to glucose signaling.
Authors:
Journal:Cell Rep
PubMed ID:33472077
Short tandem repeat profiling: part of an overall strategy for reducing the frequency of cell misidentification.
Authors:
Journal:In Vitro Cell Dev Biol Anim
PubMed ID:20927602
Phagocytosis by stroma confounds coculture studies.
Authors:
Journal:iScience
PubMed ID:34585113
Engineered Tissue Folding by Mechanical Compaction of the Mesenchyme.
Authors:
Journal:Dev Cell
PubMed ID:29290586