Message: | Something about acridinium ester (NSP-SA-NHS)
Acridine esters (NSP-SA-NHS) CAS: 199293-83-9 and related compounds have been proven to be very advantageous chemiluminescent labels, with stability, activity and sensitivity exceeding those of radioactive isotopes. Under alkaline conditions, the NHS will leave and the acridine ester will bind to the protein with a stable amide bond to form an acridine compound. After the reaction is completed, the excess acridine salt is removed through a desalting column. In the presence of alkaline hydrogen peroxide, acridine-labeled protein does not require enzymatic catalysis to emit light on its own. After adding the excitation reagent, the system immediately releases photons, which can be detected with a 430nm standard photometer. This light-emitting process is very short (the entire process occurs in less than 2 seconds), and the trigger scheme must add an internal photometer and photon detector. Proteins, peptides, antibodies, and nucleic acids can all be labeled with acridine. The labeled compound emits light rapidly under the excitation of basic hydrogen peroxide, and the labeled compound can be detected by collecting photons.
Product stability:
5. The acridinium ester luminescence process is very short (the whole process takes less than 2 seconds), and the trigger scheme must add an internal photometer and photon detector; in addition, this product can also use a multifunctional microplate reader equipped with an autosampler Perform luminescence data collection to minimize the influence of sample addition time on the collected signal. |