Single-Channel Dead Cell Apoptosis Kit with Annexin V Alexa Fluor™ 488 and SYTOX™ Green Dyes, for flow cytometry
Single-Channel Dead Cell Apoptosis Kit with Annexin V Alexa Fluor™ 488 and SYTOX™ Green Dyes, for flow cytometry
Invitrogen™

Single-Channel Dead Cell Apoptosis Kit with Annexin V Alexa Fluor™ 488 and SYTOX™ Green Dyes, for flow cytometry

Este producto detecta la externalización de la fosfatidilserina en células apoptóticas utilizando anexina V recombinante conjugada con tinte verde-fluorescente AlexaMás información
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Número de catálogoCantidad
V132401 Kit
Número de catálogo V13240
Precio (MXN)
-
Cantidad:
1 Kit
Este producto detecta la externalización de la fosfatidilserina en células apoptóticas utilizando anexina V recombinante conjugada con tinte verde-fluorescente Alexa Fluor™ 488 y células muertas mediante la tinción SYTOX™ Green de ácidos nucleicos. Después del tratamiento con ambas sondas, las células apoptóticas muestran una fluorescencia verde, las células muertas se muestran con una fluorescencia verde más brillante, y las células vivas muestran poca o ninguna fluorescencia. Estas poblaciones pueden distinguirse fácilmente en el canal FL1 de un citómetro de flujo, lo que libera los otros canales para la detección de otros colores fluorescentes.

Consulte la guía de selección para todos los ensayos de apoptosis para citometría de flujo.
Para uso exclusivo en investigación. No apto para uso en procedimientos diagnósticos.
Especificaciones
Excitación/emisiónSYTOX™ Green: 503⁄524, Alexa Fluor™ 488: 499⁄521
Líneas láser del citómetro de flujo488
Para utilizar con (aplicación)Citometría de flujo
Para utilizar con (equipo)Citómetro de flujo
N.º de reacciones50
Línea de productosAlexa Fluor, SYTOX
Tipo de productoKit de apoptosis de células muertas
Cantidad1 Kit
Condiciones de envíoHielo húmedo
ConjugadoAlexa Fluor™ 488, SYTOX™ Green
FormatoTubo
Unit Size1 kit
Contenido y almacenamiento
Contiene 1 vial de conjugado de anexina V, Alexa Fluor™ 488 (250 µl), 1 vial de SYTOX™ Green (100 µl) y 1 frasco de tampón de unión de anexina (solución 5X, 50 ml).

Almacenar en el refrigerador (2–8 °C) y proteger de la luz.

Preguntas frecuentes

How do SYTO dyes bind to DNA?

The binding mode of SYTO nucleic acid stains is unknown. However, the behavior of these and related nucleic acid dyes suggests the following binding properties:

1.They appear to contact the solvent (suggested by sensitivity to salt, divalent cations, and in particular, SDS) and thus are likely to have contacts in the grooves.
2.All SYTO dyes appear to show some base selectivity and are thus likely to have minor groove contacts.
3.They can be removed from nucleic acid via ethanol precipitation; this characteristic is not shared by ethidium bromide and other intercalators. Likewise, the dyes are not removed from nucleic acid via butanol or chloroform extraction. These extraction methods do remove ethidium bromide from nucleic acid. 4. SYTO binding is not affected by nonionic detergents.
5. SYTO dyes are not quenched by BrdU, so they do not bind nucleic acids in precisely the same way as Hoechst 33342 and DAPI ((4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole).

SYBR Green I has shown little mutagenicity on frameshift indicator strains, indicating that it isn't likely to strongly intercalate.

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

I want to study apoptosis using an Annexin V conjugate, but with adherent cells via microscopy instead of flow cytometry. Can this be done?

It has been done, but we don‘t recommend it. Both healthy cells and apoptotic cells possess phosphatidylserine on the cell surface, which can be detected with Annexin V, but apoptotic cells have significantly more of it. You can easily tell the difference between these two populations with flow cytometry, because flow cytometers are more sensitive and have a higher throughput. But with a microscope, you cannot always tell the difference, especially for adherent cells. Instead, for microscopy, we recommend a different technique, such as detecting caspases with CellEvent Caspase Detection Reagents.

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

I trypsinized my adherent cells and labeled with annexin V, and now my flow data is showing a high percentage of apoptotic cells even for control, untreated cells. What is the problem?

Trypsinization or mechanical scraping of cells temporarily disrupts the plasma membrane, allowing annexin V to bind phosphatidylserine on the cytoplasmic surface of the cell membrane and thus leading to false positive staining. Allow the cells to recover for about 30 minutes in optimal cell culture conditions and medium after trypsinizing/scraping so that they can recover their membrane integrity before staining. For lightly adherent cell lines, such as HeLa and NIH 3T3, another option is to use non-enzyme treatments like Gibco Cell Dissociation Buffer (Cat. No. 13151014).

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

Can I detect annexin V staining in an imaging assay?

Annexin V staining is not typically used in imaging experiments; it is a better reagent for flow cytometry analysis. All cells will stain to some extent, so it can be difficult to distinguish a relatively bright annexin V-stained cell from a dimmer non-apoptotic cell. Caspase activation, detected using our CellEvent Caspase 3/7 or Image-iT LIVE Caspase detection kits, is a better method for detecting apoptosis in an imaging assay.

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

When should I stain adherent cells with annexin V for flow cytometric analysis? Before or after I trypsinize them?

Trypsinize first and then allow the cells to recover about 30 minutes in optimal cell culture conditions and medium before staining with annexin V conjugates. Trypsinization or mechanical scraping of cells temporarily disrupts the plasma membrane, allowing for annexin V to bind phosphatidylserine on the cytoplasmic surface of the cell membrane and thus leading to false positive staining. For lightly adherent cell lines such as HeLa and NIH 3T3, you could use a less harsh (non-enzymatic) dissociation product like Gibco Cell Dissociation Buffer (Cat. No. 13151014).

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

Citations & References (4)

Citations & References
Abstract
Ceramide-induced TCR up-regulation.
Authors:Menné C, Lauritsen JP, Dietrich J, Kastrup J, Wegener AM, Odum N, Geisler C
Journal:J Immunol
PubMed ID:10975817
The TCR is a constitutively recycling receptor meaning that a constant fraction of TCR from the plasma membrane is transported inside the cell at the same time as a constant fraction of TCR from the intracellular pool is transported to the plasma membrane. TCR recycling is affected by protein kinase ... More
A Two-Cell Model for IL-1ß Release Mediated by Death-Receptor Signaling.
Authors:Donado CA, Cao AB, Simmons DP, Croker BA, Brennan PJ, Brenner MB
Journal:Cell Rep
PubMed ID:32268091
'Interleukin-1ß (IL-1ß) is a key orchestrator of anti-microbial immunity whose secretion is typically dependent on activation of inflammasomes. However, many pathogens have evolved strategies to evade inflammasome activation. Here we describe an alternative, two-cell model for IL-1ß release where invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells use the death receptor pathway ... More
Translational assessment of a genetic engineering methodology to improve islet function for transplantation.
Authors:van Krieken PP, Voznesenskaya A, Dicker A, Xiong Y, Park JH, Lee JI, Ilegems E, Berggren PO
Journal:EBioMedicine
PubMed ID:31262716
The functional quality of insulin-secreting islet beta cells is a major factor determining the outcome of clinical transplantations for diabetes. It is therefore of importance to develop methodological strategies aiming at optimizing islet cell function prior to transplantation. In this study we propose a synthetic biology approach to genetically engineer ... More
Downregulation of A20 Expression Increases the Immune Response and Apoptosis and Reduces Virus Production in Cells Infected by the Human Respiratory Syncytial Virus.
Authors:Martín-Vicente M, González-Sanz R, Cuesta I, Monzón S, Resino S, Martínez I
Journal:Vaccines (Basel)
PubMed ID:32102364
Human respiratory syncytial virus (HRSV) causes severe lower respiratory tract infections in infants, the elderly, and immunocompromised adults. Regulation of the immune response against HRSV is crucial to limiting virus replication and immunopathology. The A20/TNFAIP3 protein is a negative regulator of nuclear factor kappa B (NF-kB) and interferon regulatory factors ... More