About 4 results found for searched term "Ethidium bromide" (0.154 seconds)
Cat.No. | Name | Target |
---|---|---|
M40780 | Ethidium bromide | Fluorescent Dye |
EtBr | ||
Ethidium bromide is an embedded dye used for fluorescent labeling (nucleic acid staining) in molecular biology laboratory science, such as agarose gel electrophoresis. Ethidium bromide intercalates double-stranded DNA and RNA and acts as a frameshift mutagen. It can also be used in conjunction with acridine orange to differentiate between viable, apoptotic and necrotic cells. | ||
M40970 | Hydroethidine | Fluorescent Dye |
Hydroethidine is a peroxide indicator that freely enters cells and dehydrogenates into ethidium bromide and distinguishes between superoxide and H2O2, and can be used to identify proliferating and hypoxic cells in tumors (λex=520 nm, λem=600 nm). This product has been merged into M9696 | ||
M55574 | Timcodar | Antibiotic |
VX-853 | ||
Timcodar (VX-853) is a macrolide agent and mammalian multidrug-resistant bacterial efflux pump inhibitor that directly inhibits ethidium bromide efflux in Staphylococcus aureus. Timcodar has the potential to enhance antibiotic activity by inhibiting bacterial efflux pumps, effectively reducing the minimum inhibitory concentration of some antibiotics against Gram-positive pathogens such as Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcus and Streptococcus pneumoniae. | ||
M55575 | Timcodar mesylate | Antibiotic |
VX-853-2 | ||
Timcodar mesylate (VX-853-2) is a macrolide agent and mammalian multidrug-resistant bacterial efflux pump inhibitor that directly inhibits ethidium bromide efflux in Staphylococcus aureus. Timcodar mesylate has the potential to enhance antibiotic activity by inhibiting bacterial efflux pumps, effectively reducing the minimum inhibitory concentration of some antibiotics against Gram-positive pathogens such as Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcus and Streptococcus pneumoniae. |
Products are for research use only. Not for human use. We do not sell to patients.
© Copyright 2010-2024 AbMole BioScience. All Rights Reserved.