Potenciador de señal Image-iT™ FX
Potenciador de señal Image-iT™ FX
Invitrogen™

Potenciador de señal Image-iT™ FX

El potenciador de señal Image-iT™ FX es un líquido que se aplica directamente a los portaobjetos o cubreobjetos que contienenMás información
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Número de catálogoCantidad
I3693310 mL
Número de catálogo I36933
Precio (CLP)
224.681
Each
Añadir al carro de la compra
Cantidad:
10 mL
Precio (CLP)
224.681
Each
Añadir al carro de la compra
El potenciador de señal Image-iT™ FX es un líquido que se aplica directamente a los portaobjetos o cubreobjetos que contienen muestras de tejido o células fijas y permeabilizadas antes de la tinción con sondas fluorescentes. Cuando se utiliza el potenciador de señal Image-iT™ FX, se elimina en gran medida la fluorescencia inespecífica (fondo) que se suele observar con la aplicación de conjugados fluorescentes de IgG de cabra anticonejo, cabra antirratón o estreptavidina.

Atributos clave

Protocolo sencillo: aplique el potenciador a partir de una solución preparada en un frasco cuentagotas
Eficaz con muchas etiquetas fluorescentes (consulte la tabla 2 en el siguiente manual de usuario)
Rentable: suministros suficientes para 50 cubreobjetos estándar
Compatible con otros pasos de bloqueo del protocolo de inmunotinción

Reducción de la unión inespecífica de tintes y tejidos.
Los tintes Alexa Fluor™ y muchos otros tintes han cargado negativamente las modificaciones que pueden conducir a la asociación inespecífica con células y tejidos. Aunque no siempre resulta significativo, puede ser un problema cuando se transgreden los límites de sensibilidad en dianas escasas. El potenciador de señal Image-iT™ FX reduce significativamente esta unión, lo que hace que se produzcan importantes mejoras en la tinción.

¿Necesita ayuda para decidir qué producto necesita para su sistema de adquisición de imágenes de células? Consulte nuestro flujo de trabajo y árbol de decisiones de adquisición de imágenes de células.

¿Cansado de una mala relación señal-ruido? Consulte nuestra gama de productos antidecoloración y potenciadores de señal de Molecular Probes™

Para uso exclusivo en investigación. No diseñado para uso terapéutico o de diagnóstico en animales o humanos.
Para uso exclusivo en investigación. No apto para uso en procedimientos diagnósticos.
Especificaciones
Línea de productosImage-iT
Cantidad10 mL
Duración de almacenamientoAl menos 6 meses
Condiciones de envíoTemperatura ambiente
Tipo de productoPotenciador de señal FX
Tipo de soluciónPotenciador de señal
Unit SizeEach
Contenido y almacenamiento
Almacenar a temperatura ambiente.

Preguntas frecuentes

I used Image-iT FX Signal Enhancer solution to get rid of nonspecific nuclear labeling with Alexa Fluor 568 secondary antibody, but I also saw a significant reduction in my specific mitochondrial antibody labeling. Why is this and what can I do?

The Image-iT FX Signal Enhancer reduces non-specific binding of dye conjugates by blocking positively-charged areas of cells or tissues that attract negatively-charged dyes. In cells after fixation, some positively-charged structures are the nuclei and mitochondria. Thus, you would expect to see a reduction in both mitochondrial and nuclear signal. The lower signal you see afterward is the specific mitochondrial signal; the fluorescence that was lost was the non-specific labeling.

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

Can I use the Image-iT FX Signal Enhancer instead of my normal blocking solution (BSA or serum)?

No. Image-iT FX Signal Enhancer is not a protein blocker, like BSA, normal serum, or other commercial antibody blockers. Use it as a separate step to block non-specific charge-based binding of dyes to cellular components.

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

I am labeling fixed and permeabilized cultured cells with an Alexa Fluor secondary antibody. My secondary-only control is showing nuclear and mitochondrial labeling, even though I did a thorough protein blocking and tried a concentration range. What can be done to minimize this non-specific binding?

This is most likely charge-based binding due to interactions of the charge on the dyes with cellular components of opposite charge. This can be blocked by using the Image-iT FX Signal Enhancer Solution which eliminates non-specific binding due to charge. The Signal Enhancer is applied as a pre-blocking step and your regular blocking regimen should be used to limit non-specific binding due to protein-protein interactions. Signal Enhancer cannot be used on live cells.

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

I am observing high background when I analyze my click-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 can also perform the complete click reaction on a carrier solvent-only, no EdU or no-EU control to verify the specificity of the click reaction signal.

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

I used a neuron-specific antibody to label my neurons. How can I reduce non-specific antibody binding?

A blocking step should be performed to reduce fluorescence due to non-specific antibody binding. A common blocking step is the addition of a 2-5% solution of bovine serum albumin (fraction V defatted BSA). Another approach employs the addition of a 5-10% solution of serum from the species in which the secondary antibodies were raised. For example, when using goat anti-mouse IgG secondary antibodies, samples may be effectively blocked with 5-10% normal goat serum. To further reduce background fluorescence, the Image-iT FX Signal Enhancer can be included as a pre-blocking step to decrease non-specific labeling due to charge interactions between the dyes on the conjugates and the cellular constituents.
If you are using a secondary antibody make sure that the species of the antibody is not the same as the species of the sample. For example do not use an anti-mouse secondary antibody on mouse tissue.
Titrate the antibody to the lowest concentration you can use and still get adequate signal.
Try using a fluorescently tagged primary antibody because it should give reduced background but be aware this can reduce signal intensity.

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

Citations & References (28)

Citations & References
Abstract
NKT cells are critical to initiate an inflammatory response after Pseudomonas aeruginosa ocular infection in susceptible mice.
Authors:Hazlett LD, Li Q, Liu J, McClellan S, Du W, Barrett RP
Journal:J Immunol
PubMed ID:17617607
'CD4(+) T cells produce IFN-gamma contributing to corneal perforation in C57BL/6 (B6) mice after Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection. To determine the role of NK and NKT cells, infected corneas of B6 mice were dual immunolabeled. Initially, more NKT than NK cells were detected, but as disease progressed, NK cells increased, while ... More
Identification of STAT3 as a substrate of receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase T.
Authors:Zhang X, Guo A, Yu J, Possemato A, Chen Y, Zheng W, Polakiewicz RD, Kinzler KW, Vogelstein B, Velculescu VE, Wang ZJ,
Journal:Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
PubMed ID:17360477
'Protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP) receptor T (PTPRT) is the most frequently mutated PTP in human cancers. However, the cell signaling pathways regulated by PTPRT have not yet been elucidated. Here, we report identification of signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) as a substrate of PTPRT. Phosphorylation of a ... More
Displacement of SERCA from SR lipid caveolae-related domains by Bcl-2: a possible mechanism for SERCA inactivation.
Authors:Dremina ES, Sharov VS, Schöneich C
Journal:Biochemistry
PubMed ID:16388593
'Bcl-2 exerts its anti-apoptotic effect in part through the regulation of Ca2+ homeostasis at the level of the endoplasmic reticulum. Earlier, we demonstrated that a truncated form of Bcl-2, Bcl-2delta21, interacts with and destabilizes the skeletal muscle sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase (SERCA) [Dremina, E. S., Sharov, V. S., Kumar, K., Zaidi, ... More
Androgen induces expression of the multidrug resistance protein gene MRP4 in prostate cancer cells.
Authors:Cai C, Omwancha J, Hsieh CL, Shemshedini L
Journal:Prostate Cancer Prostatic Dis
PubMed ID:17003774
'Multidrug resistance-associated proteins (MRPs) may mediate multidrug resistance in tumor cells. Using a gene array analysis, we have identified MRP4 as an androgen receptor (AR)-regulated gene. Dihydrotestosterone induced MRP4 expression in both androgen-dependent and -independent LNCaP cells, whereas there was little detectable expression in PC-3 or normal prostate epithelial cells. ... More
Constitutive interferon-inducible protein 16-inflammasome activation during Epstein-Barr virus latency I, II, and III in B and epithelial cells.
Authors:Ansari MA, Singh VV, Dutta S, Veettil MV, Dutta D, Chikoti L, Lu J, Everly D, Chandran B,
Journal:
PubMed ID:23720728
'Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), etiologically linked with human B-cell malignancies and nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC), establishes three types of latency that facilitate its episomal genome persistence and evasion of host immune responses. The innate inflammasome responses recognize the pathogen-associated molecular patterns which lead into the association of a cytoplasmic sensor such as ... More