The largest database of trusted experimental protocols

Luciferin detection reagent with esterase

Manufactured by Promega
Sourced in United States

Luciferin detection reagent with esterase is a laboratory product used to detect and measure the presence of luciferase enzyme activity. It contains luciferin, the substrate for the luciferase enzyme, as well as an esterase that can be used to release luciferin from a modified, cell-permeable form. This reagent is designed to facilitate the quantification of luciferase reporter gene expression or other luciferase-based assays.

Automatically generated - may contain errors

2 protocols using luciferin detection reagent with esterase

1

Bioluminescent Substrate Profiling of Human Liver Microsomes

Check if the same lab product or an alternative is used in the 5 most similar protocols
Triton-X100 was from Leagene (Beijing, China); Tris-HCl, from AKZ-Biotech (Tianjin, China); potassium chloride, ammonium bicarbonate, potassium dihydrogen phosphate and potassium hydrogen phosphate were from Jiangtian Chemical (Tianjin, China); glycerol was from Dingguo (Tianjin, China); 1 X PBS buffer was from Corning (Manassas, VA); human liver microsomes (HLMs) were from Sekisui XenoTech (Kansas City, KS, USA); Luciferin 6′ 2-fluorobenzyl ether (Luciferin-2FBE), Luciferin 6′ 3-fluorobenzyl ether (Luciferin-3FBE), Luciferin 6′ 2-furfuryl ether (Luciferin-2FE), Luciferin 6′ 3-furfuryl ether (Luciferin-3FE), Luciferin 6′ 2-(5-trifluoromethyl)furfuryl ether (Luciferin-TFM2FE), and Luciferin 6′ 3-thenyl ether (Luciferin-3TE) were synthesized as described [13 (link)]; the NADPH regeneration system (20X solution A: 26 mM NADP+, 66 mM glucose-6-phosphate, 66 mM MgCl2; and 100X solution B: 40 U/ml glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in 5 mM sodium citrate, pH 5.5), Luciferin detection reagent (Cat# V8921), and Luciferin detection reagent with esterase (Cat# V8931) were from Promega (Madison, USA); white opaque 96-well microtiter plates were from Nunc (Thermofisher scientific, Lagenselbold, Germany); all other chemicals and reagents used were of the highest grade available.
+ Open protocol
+ Expand
2

Luminescence Assay for Proluciferin Compounds

Check if the same lab product or an alternative is used in the 5 most similar protocols
Proluciferin compounds (except luciferin-3FEME) and the NADPH regeneration system (20X solution A: 26 mM NADP+, 66 mM glucose-6-phosphate, 66 mM MgCl2; and 100X solution B: 40 U/ml glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in 5 mM sodium citrate, pH 5.5), the luciferin detection reagent (Cat# V8921), and the luciferin detection reagent with esterase (Cat# V8931) were from Promega (Madison, WI). Luciferin 6' 3-furfuryl ether methyl ester (luciferin-3FEME) was synthesized as described [11 (link)]. Triton X-100 was from Leagene (Beijing, China), and Tris-HCl was from AKZ-Biotech (Tianjin, China). Potassium chloride, ammonium bicarbonate, potassium dihydrogen phosphate, and potassium hydrogen phosphate were from Jiangtian Chemical (Tianjin, China), and 1X TBS buffer, 1X PBS (0.1 mM CaCl2 (anhydrous), 2.7 mM KCl, 1.5 mM KH2PO4, 0.5 mM MgCl2, 137 mM NaCl, 8.1 mM Na2HPO4, pH 7.4) buffer were from Corning (Manassas, VA). White opaque 96-well microtiter plates were from Nunc (ThermoFisher Scientific, Lagenselbold, Germany). All other chemicals and reagents used were of the highest grade available.
+ Open protocol
+ Expand

About PubCompare

Our mission is to provide scientists with the largest repository of trustworthy protocols and intelligent analytical tools, thereby offering them extensive information to design robust protocols aimed at minimizing the risk of failures.

We believe that the most crucial aspect is to grant scientists access to a wide range of reliable sources and new useful tools that surpass human capabilities.

However, we trust in allowing scientists to determine how to construct their own protocols based on this information, as they are the experts in their field.

Ready to get started?

Sign up for free.
Registration takes 20 seconds.
Available from any computer
No download required

Sign up now

Revolutionizing how scientists
search and build protocols!