Dynabeads™ M-450 activados por tosilos
Dynabeads™ M-450 activados por tosilos
Invitrogen™

Dynabeads™ M-450 activados por tosilos

Dynabeads™ M-450 Tosylactivated son gránulos superparamagnéticos de 4,5 µm que contienen grupos tosilos superficiales. Los gránulos crean enlaces covalentes entreMás información
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Número de catálogoCantidad
140135 mL
Número de catálogo 14013
Precio (MXN)
-
Cantidad:
5 mL
Dynabeads™ M-450 Tosylactivated son gránulos superparamagnéticos de 4,5 µm que contienen grupos tosilos superficiales. Los gránulos crean enlaces covalentes entre los grupos amino primarios y los grupos de sulfhidrilos de los anticuerpos para colocarlos en la posición óptima para la unión de proteínas de la superficie celular. El bajo fondo y la unión covalente de los anticuerpos convierten a estos gránulos en una opción excelente para aplicaciones de separación celular cuando no es necesario que los gránulos liberen las células secuencia abajo.

• Reduzca rápidamente la cantidad de células o aísle positivamente las células de interés para el posterior análisis molecular
• Excelentes para los procedimientos de aislamiento celular en los que utiliza su propio anticuerpo exclusivo
• En aplicaciones que no están basadas en células, como la activación celular, se pueden acoplar varios anticuerpos a la misma partícula

Procedimiento de acoplamiento
El acoplamiento covalente se realiza en una noche mediante la incubación del anticuerpo que desee con los gránulos Dynabeads™ M-450 activadas por tosilo. El acoplamiento óptimo se produce a un pH alto (8,5–9,5) y a 37 °C. Para anticuerpos de pH lábil, el acoplamiento se puede realizar en otro tampón con un pH de 7,4.

No recomendado para inmunoprecipitación (IP)
No se recomienda el uso de estos gránulos de 4,5 µm activados por tosilos en IP puesto que su capacidad de superficie por unidad de masa es menor que la de los gránulos activados por tosilos y de epoxi Dynabeads™ de 1 µm y 2,8 µm.

Más información sobre productos Dynabeads™
• Encuentre productos Dynabeads™ para toda una gama de aplicaciones.
• Consulte imanes para separaciones de Dynabeads™
Para uso exclusivo en investigación. No apto para uso en procedimientos diagnósticos.
Especificaciones
Tipo de célulaTodas las células de todas las especies
Tecnología de aislamientoAgotamiento, aislamiento positivo para aplicaciones moleculares
N.° de celdasProcesa ∼2x10^9 células en total
Viabilidad de la salida>95%
Línea de productosDYNAL, Dynabeads
Grado de pureza o calidadCalidad para investigación
Cantidad5 mL
ReactividadTodas las especies
Tipo de muestraPBMC, digestiones de tejido, sangre
Condiciones de envíoTemperatura ambiente
N.º de celda del material de partida1 x 10^7 celdas por aislamiento
Especies dianaTodas las especies
Diámetro (métrico)4,5 μm
Tipo de productoGránulo activado por tosilo
Unit SizeEach
Contenido y almacenamiento
Contiene: Gránulos de 5 ml con una concentración de 4 × 10^8 gránulos/ml en agua destilada.
Almacenamiento: 2 °C a 8 °C.

Preguntas frecuentes

My Dynabeads magnetic beads are not pelleting well with the magnet. Do you have any suggestions for me?

Please review the following possibilities for why your Dynabeads magnetic beads are not pelleting:

- The solution is too viscous.
- The beads have formed aggregates because of protein-protein interaction.

Try these suggestions: - Increase separation time (leave tub on magnet for 2-5 minutes)
- Add DNase I to the lysate (~0.01 mg/mL)
- Increase the Tween 20 concentration to ~0.05% of the binding and/or washing buffer.
- Add up to 20 mM beta-merecaptoethanol to the binding and/or wash buffers.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Dynabeads Nucleic Acid Purification Support Center.

I have a long double-stranded DNA fragment I would like to isolate. What product do you recommend?

For biotin-labeled DNA that is less than 1 kb, we recommend you use Dynabeads M270 Streptavidin (Cat. No. 65305) and MyOne C1 magnetic beads (Cat. No. 65001). We recommend our Dynabeads KilobaseBINDER Kit (Cat. No. 60101), which is designed to immobilize long (>1 kb) double-stranded DNA molecules. The KilobaseBINDER reagent consists of M-280 Streptavidin-coupled Dynabeads magnetic beads along with a patented immobilization activator in the binding solution to bind to long, biotinylated DNA molecules for isolation. Please see the following link (https://www.thermofisher.com/us/en/home/life-science/dna-rna-purification-analysis/napamisc/capture-of-biotinylated-targets/immobilisation-of-long-biotinylated-dna-fragments.html) for more information in regards to long biotinylated DNA fragment isolation.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Dynabeads Nucleic Acid Purification Support Center.

Can I use Dynabeads magnetic beads to isolate single-stranded DNA templates?

Yes, Dynabeads magnetic beads can be used to isolate single-stranded DNA. Streptavidin Dynabeads magnetic beads can be used to target biotinylated DNA fragments, followed by denaturation of the double-stranded DNA and removal of the non-biotinylated strand. The streptavidin-coupled Dynabeads magnetic beads will not inhibit any enzymatic activity. This enables further handling and manipulation of the bead-bound DNA directly on the solid phase. Please see the following link (https://www.thermofisher.com/us/en/home/life-science/dna-rna-purification-analysis/napamisc/capture-of-biotinylated-targets/preparing-single-stranded-dna-templates.html) for more information in regards to single-stranded DNA capture.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Dynabeads Nucleic Acid Purification Support Center.

What is the magnetic susceptibility for Dynabeads magnetic beads?

Magnetic susceptibility is a measure of how quickly the beads will migrate to the magnet. This will depend on the iron content and the character of the iron oxide. The magnetic susceptibility given for the Dynabeads magnetic beads is the mass susceptibility, given either as cgs units/g or m^3/kg (the latter being an SI unit). For ferri- and ferromagnetic substances, the magnetic mass susceptibility is dependent upon the magnetic field strength (H), as the magnetization of such substances is not a linear function of H but approaches a saturation value with increasing field. For that reason, the magnetic mass susceptibility of the Dynabeads magnetic beads is determined by a standardized procedure under fixed conditions. The magnetic mass susceptibility given in our catalog is thus the SI unit. Conversion from Gaussian (cgs, emu) units into SI units for magnetic mass susceptibility is achieved by multiplying the Gaussian factor (emu/g or cgs/g) by 4 pi x 10^-3. The resulting unit is also called the rationalized magnetic mass susceptibility, which should be distinguished from the (SI) dimensionless magnetic susceptibility unit. In general, magnetic mass susceptibility is a measure of the force (Fz) influencing an object positioned in a nonhomogenous magnetic field. The magnetic mass susceptibility of the Dynabeads magnetic beads is measured by weighing a sample, and then subjecting the sample to a magnetic field of known strength. The weight (F1) is then measured, and compared to the weight of the sample when the magnetic field is turned off (F0). The susceptibility is then calculated as K x 10^-3 = [(F1-F0) x m x 0.335 x 10^6], where K is the mass susceptibility of the sample of mass m. The susceptibility is then converted to SI units.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Dynabeads Nucleic Acid Purification Support Center.

How can I determine coupling efficiency of Dynabeads magnetic beads?

There are different methods to check binding of ligands to the beads, including optical density (OD) measurement, fluorescent labeling, and radioactive labeling.

For OD measurement, you would measure the OD of the ligand before immobilization to the beads and compare it with the ligand concentration that is left in the supernatant after coating. This gives a crude measurement of how much protein has bound to the beads.

Protocol:

1.Set spectrophotometer to the right wavelength. As a blank, use the Coupling Buffer.
2.Measure the absorbance of the Pre-Coupling Solution. A further dilution may be necessary to read the absorbance, depending upon the amount of ligand added.
3.Measure the absorbance of the Post-Coupling Solution. A dilution may be necessary to read the absorbance.
4.Calculate the coupling efficiency, expressed as the % protein uptake, as follows. [(Pre-Coupling Solution x D) - (Post-Coupling Solution x D)] x 100/(Pre-Coupling Solution x D) where D = dilution factor.

For fluorescent labeling, we suggest negatively quantifying the amount of ligand bound by measuring ligand remaining in the coupling supernatant (compared to the original sample), rather than directly measuring the ligands on the beads. Add labeled ligand to the beads, and measure how much ligand is left in the supernatant (not bound to the beads). By comparing this with the total amount added in the first place, you can then calculate how much of the ligand that has been bound to the beads. Keep in mind that the Dynabeads magnetic beads are also autofluorescent, which is why direct measuring of fluorescence of the bead-bound ligands is not recommended, but rather this indirect approach. The label could be, for example, FITC/PE. Some researchers perform a direct approach with success (using a flow cytometer).

Radioactive labeling is the most sensitive method of the three, but it is also the most difficult one. It involves radioactively labeling a portion of the ligand. We use radiolabeled I-125 in tracer amounts and mix it with "cold" ligands in a known ratio before coupling. The absolute quantities for the ligand on the beads should be obtained by measuring the beads in a scintillation (gamma) counter and comparing the cpm with a standard.

Protocol:

1.Take out an appropriate amount of beads and wash the beads in 1 mL of binding buffer.
2.Pipette out desired amount of human IgG in a separate tube.
3.Mix the human IgG with I-125-labeled human IgG (30,000 - 100,000 cpm).
4.Dilute the mixture of human IgG and I-125-labeled human IgG to 100 mL in binding buffer.
5.Incubate for 30 minutes at room temperature and measure the cpm in a scintillation counter.
6.Wash the beads (with coating) four times, and measure cpm again.
The % binding is calculated by using the equation : (cpm after washing/cpm before washing)x100%.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Dynabeads Nucleic Acid Purification Support Center.

Citations & References (6)

Citations & References
Abstract
Relation of the size and intracellular sorting of apoB to the formation of VLDL 1 and VLDL 2.
Authors:Stillemark-Billton P, Beck C, Borén J, Olofsson SO,
Journal:J Lipid Res
PubMed ID:15520448
'In this study, we tested the hypothesis that two separate pathways, the two-step process and an apolipoprotein B (apoB) size-dependent lipidation process, give rise to different lipoproteins. Expression of apoB-100 and C-terminally truncated forms of apoB-100 in McA-RH7777 cells demonstrated that VLDL particles can be assembled by apoB size-dependent linear ... More
Cell stiffness and receptors: evidence for cytoskeletal subnetworks.
Authors:Huang H, Sylvan J, Jonas M, Barresi R, So PT, Campbell KP, Lee RT,
Journal:Am J Physiol Cell Physiol
PubMed ID:15385268
'Viscoelastic models of cells often treat cells as homogeneous objects. However, studies have demonstrated that cellular properties are local and can change dramatically on the basis of the location probed. Because membrane receptors are linked in various ways to the intracellular space, with some receptors linking to the cytoskeleton and ... More
Isolation and characterization of microvessel endothelial cells from human mammary adipose tissue.
Authors:Hewett PW, Murray JC, Price EA, Watts ME, Woodcock M,
Journal:In Vitro Cell Dev Biol Anim
PubMed ID:7686548
A method for the isolation and long-term culture of human microvessel endothelial cells from mammary adipose tissue (HuMMEC) obtained at breast reduction surgery has been developed. Pure cultures of HuMMEC were isolated by sequential digestion of the fat with collagenase and trypsin followed by specific selection of microvessel fragments with ... More
Human lung microvessel endothelial cells: isolation, culture, and characterization.
Authors:Hewett PW, Murray JC,
Journal:Microvasc Res
PubMed ID:8412855
The pulmonary vasculature is of great physiological/pathological significance. We have isolated and cultured microvessel endothelial cells (HuLEC) from lung tissue obtained from lung transplant recipients by modification of published methods. Pure cultures of HuLEC were isolated by mechanical disaggregation of the tissue prior to sequential dispase and trypsin digestion to ... More
Expansion of functional endogenous antigen-specific CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells from nonobese diabetic mice.
Authors:Masteller EL, Warner MR, Tang Q, Tarbell KV, McDevitt H, Bluestone JA,
Journal:J Immunol
PubMed ID:16116193
CD4+CD25+Foxp3+ regulatory T cells (T(reg)) are critical for controlling autoimmunity. Evidence suggests that T(reg) development, peripheral maintenance, and suppressive function are dependent on Ag specificity. However, there is little direct evidence that the T(reg) responsible for controlling autoimmunity in NOD mice or other natural settings are Ag specific. In fact, ... More