CCF2-FA (Free Acid) is a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) substrate that consists of a cephalosporin core linking B7-hydroxycoumarin toRead more
CCF2-FA (Free Acid) is a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) substrate that consists of a cephalosporin core linking B7-hydroxycoumarin to fluorescein. This product is intended for use as a beta-lactamase substrate in a GeneBLAzer™ cell-based assay.
GeneBLAzer™ cell-based assays typically utilize the membrane-permeant ester forms (CCF2-AM and CCF4-AM) of the negatively charged fluorescent beta-lactamase substrates, CCF2 and CCF4. These lipophilic esters readily enter the cell, where cleavage by endogeneous cytoplasmic esterases rapidly converts them into their negatively charged forms, thereby trapping them in the cytosol.
CCF2-FA is essentially the CCF2 substrate without the esters found in the AM version. CCF2-FA is de-esterified and used in cell lysate applications, bypassing loading across the cell membrane and de-esterification steps. Cell lysates are the preferred method for applications using cells that contain a cell wall. CCF2-FA can also be used as a control to acquire the excitation and emission spectra for CCF2-AM and CCF4-AM.
For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.
Specifications
Cell PermeabilityCell-Impermeant
Product LineGeneBLAzer
Quantity1mg
Shipping ConditionApproved for shipment on Wet or Dry Ice
SubstrateCCF2-FA
Detection MethodFluorescence
Substrate PropertiesChemical Substrate
Substrate TypeBeta-Lactamase Substrate
Unit SizeEach
Contents & Storage
Store in freezer (-5 to -30°C).
Citations & References (1)
Citations & References
Abstract
Folate receptor alpha and caveolae are not required for Ebola virus glycoprotein-mediated viral infection.
Folate receptor alpha (FRalpha) has been described as a factor involved in mediating Ebola virus entry into cells (6). Furthermore, it was suggested that interaction with FRalpha results in internalization and subsequent viral ingress into the cytoplasm via caveolae (9). Descriptions of cellular receptors for Ebola virus and its entry ... More