Fluoro Thiol ™ |
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| Key Benefits: | ||||||||||||
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| Introduction & Assay Principle | ||||||||||||
During the normal course of metabolism, oxygen is partly reduced as electrons leak out of the electron transport chain during respiration. These partially reduced oxygen species (ROS) can react with organic substances through non-catalytic means. Furthermore, ROS can be generated via endogenous enzyme systems like plasma NADPH oxidase, cytoplasmic xanthine oxidase and organelle sources e.g., cytochrome P-450. ROS have been implicated in regulating diverse cellular functions including proliferation, defense against pathogens, intra-cellular signaling, transcriptional activation and apoptosis. Elevation of ROS beyond the buffering capacity of the cell can lead to oxidative stress. Elevated ROS levels can lead to damage of DNA/RNA, proteins and lipids which may lead to apoptosis. Cells have developed several mechanisms to counter act elevated ROS levels such as a thiol reducing buffer composed of cellular thiol levels (glutathione and thioredoxion) for the maintenance of the reduction-oxidation (redox) state of the cell, and enzymes to remove ROS (catalase, superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase) (1-2). |
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| Reaction | ||||||||||||
Cell Technology’s Fluoro- Thiol kit detects Thiol levels in cells and tissue extracts. Hatsuo Maeda and co workers have developed a quenched dye as a fluorescent specific probe for general thiol detection (3). The reaction scheme is outlined below. |
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| Citations | ||||||||||||
Androgens Induce Dopaminergic Neurotoxicity via Caspase-3-Dependent Activation of Protein Kinase Cδ - Rebecca L. Cunningham, Andrea Giuffrida, and James L. Roberts - Endocrinology, doi:10.1210/en.2009-0640 |
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| Kit contents (for 100 assays) | ||||||||||||
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* Please call 888 7 ASSAYS (888-727-7297) or email info@celltechnology.com for volume pricing

