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Tide Quencher™ 4WS alkyne [TQ4WS alkyne]

TQ4WS is designed to be a superior quencher to ROX, TF4, iFluor® 594, Alexa Fluor® 594 and Texas Red®. TQ4WS has (a). much stronger absorption; (b). much higher quenching efficiency; and (c). versatile reactive forms with desired solubility for labeling oligonucleotides and peptides. This TQ4WS-DBCO product is reactive to azides under copper-free conditions, and useful for click chemistry. DBCO is probably the most common alkyne among the strain promoted alkyne-azide cycloaddition (SPAAC), which is also termed as the Cu-free click reaction. Cyclooctynes and azides exclusively and efficiently react with each other while remain inert to naturally occurring functional groups such as amines. SPAAC enables labeling a wide variety of biomolecules without any auxiliary reagents in an aqueous and otherwise complex chemical environment through the formation of a stable triazole. DBCO (dibenzocyclooctynes) compounds comprise a class of reagents that possesses reasonably fast kinetics and good stability in aqueous buffers. Within physiological temperature and pH ranges, the DBCO group will not react with amines or hydroxyls that are naturally present in many biomolecules. Additionally, reaction of the DBCO group with the azide group is significantly faster than with sulfhydryl groups (–SH, thiol).

Calculators

Common stock solution preparation

Table 1. Volume of DMSO needed to reconstitute specific mass of Tide Quencher™ 4WS alkyne [TQ4WS alkyne] to given concentration. Note that volume is only for preparing stock solution. Refer to sample experimental protocol for appropriate experimental/physiological buffers.

0.1 mg0.5 mg1 mg5 mg10 mg
1 mM86.319 µL431.596 µL863.193 µL4.316 mL8.632 mL
5 mM17.264 µL86.319 µL172.639 µL863.193 µL1.726 mL
10 mM8.632 µL43.16 µL86.319 µL431.596 µL863.193 µL

Molarity calculator

Enter any two values (mass, volume, concentration) to calculate the third.

Mass (Calculate)Molecular weightVolume (Calculate)Concentration (Calculate)Moles
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Spectrum

Product family

NameExtinction coefficient (cm -1 M -1)Correction Factor (260 nm)Correction Factor (280 nm)
Tide Quencher™ 5WS alkyne [TQ5WS alkyne]1300000.0720.082
Tide Quencher™ 6WS alkyne [TQ6WS alkyne]1300000.1200.102
Tide Quencher™ 7WS alkyne [TQ7WS alkyne]1400000.0720.091
Tide Quencher™ 1 alkyne [TQ1 alkyne]200000.1470.194
Tide Quencher™ 2 alkyne [TQ2 alkyne]210000.1000.12
Tide Quencher™ 3 alkyne [TQ3 alkyne]220000.0850.091
Tide Quencher™ 2WS alkyne [TQ2WS alkyne]480000.1000.120
Tide Quencher™ 4WS-DBCO [TQ4WS-DBCO]9000010.1490.136

Citations

View all 7 citations: Citation Explorer
A mechanistic model to predict effects of cathepsin B and cystatin C on β-amyloid aggregation and degradation
Authors: Perlenfein, Tyler J and Murphy, Regina M
Journal: Journal of Biological Chemistry (2017): jbc--M117
Real-Time Detection of a Self-Replicating RNA Enzyme
Authors: Olea, Charles and Joyce, Gerald F
Journal: Molecules (2016): 1310
Maternal serum glycosylated fibronectin as a point-of-care biomarker for assessment of preeclampsia
Authors: Rasanen, Juha and Quinn, Matthew J and Laurie, Amber and Bean, Eric and Roberts, Charles T and Nagalla, Srinivasa R and Gravett, Michael G
Journal: American journal of obstetrics and gynecology (2015): 82--e1
Development of Multi-Parametric/Multimodal Spectroscopy Apparatus for Characterization of Functional Interfaces
Authors: Zhou, Lang and Arugula, Mary and Easley, Christopher J and Shannon, Curtis and Simonian, Aleks and r, undefined
Journal: ECS Transactions (2015): 9--16
Array of biodegradable microrafts for isolation and implantation of living, adherent cells
Authors: Wang, Yuli and Phillips, Colleen N and Herrera, Gabriela S and Sims, Christopher E and Yeh, Jen Jen and Allbritton, Nancy L
Journal: RSC advances (2013): 9264--9272

References

View all 25 references: Citation Explorer
Evaluation of tetramethylrhodamine and black hole quencher 1 labeled probes and five commercial amplification mixes in TaqMan real-time RT-PCR assays for respiratory pathogens
Authors: Yang GP, Erdman DD, Tondella ML, Fields BS.
Journal: J Virol Methods (2009): 288
Time-resolved FRET method for typing polymorphic alleles of the human leukocyte antigen system by using a single DNA probe
Authors: Andreoni A, Bondani M, Nardo L.
Journal: Photochem Photobiol Sci (2009): 1202
Tumor-specific detection of an optically targeted antibody combined with a quencher-conjugated neutravidin "quencher-chaser": a dual "quench and chase" strategy to improve target to nontarget ratios for molecular imaging of cancer
Authors: Ogawa M, Kosaka N, Choyke PL, Kobayashi H.
Journal: Bioconjug Chem (2009): 147
The detection of platelet derived growth factor using decoupling of quencher-oligonucleotide from aptamer/quantum dot bioconjugates
Authors: Kim GI, Kim KW, Oh MK, Sung YM.
Journal: Nanotechnology (2009): 175503
Development of a cell-based hepatitis C virus infection fluorescent resonance energy transfer assay for high-throughput antiviral compound screening
Authors: Yu X, Sainz B, Jr., Uprichard SL.
Journal: Antimicrob Agents Chemother (2009): 4311
Page updated on November 21, 2024

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Catalog Number2069
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Physical properties

Molecular weight

1158.49

Solvent

DMSO

Spectral properties

Absorbance (nm)

605

Correction Factor (260 nm)

0.149

Correction Factor (280 nm)

0.136

Extinction coefficient (cm -1 M -1)

900001

Storage, safety and handling

H-phraseH303, H313, H333
Hazard symbolXN
Intended useResearch Use Only (RUO)
R-phraseR20, R21, R22

Storage

Freeze (< -15 °C); Minimize light exposure
UNSPSC12171501
Click chemistry is a method for attaching a&nbsp;probe&nbsp;or&nbsp;substrate&nbsp;of interest to a specific biomolecule, a process called&nbsp;bioconjugation. The possibility of attaching dyes&nbsp;and other&nbsp;reporter molecules&nbsp;has made click chemistry a very powerful tool for identifying, locating, and characterizing both old and new biomolecules. The classic click reaction is the copper-catalyzed reaction of an&nbsp;azide&nbsp;with an&nbsp;alkyne&nbsp;to form a 5-membered&nbsp;heteroatom&nbsp;ring, this reaction is commonly called Cu(I)-Catalyzed Azide-Alkyne&nbsp;Cycloaddition&nbsp;(CuAAC).
Click chemistry is a method for attaching a&nbsp;probe&nbsp;or&nbsp;substrate&nbsp;of interest to a specific biomolecule, a process called&nbsp;bioconjugation. The possibility of attaching dyes&nbsp;and other&nbsp;reporter molecules&nbsp;has made click chemistry a very powerful tool for identifying, locating, and characterizing both old and new biomolecules. The classic click reaction is the copper-catalyzed reaction of an&nbsp;azide&nbsp;with an&nbsp;alkyne&nbsp;to form a 5-membered&nbsp;heteroatom&nbsp;ring, this reaction is commonly called Cu(I)-Catalyzed Azide-Alkyne&nbsp;Cycloaddition&nbsp;(CuAAC).
Click chemistry is a method for attaching a&nbsp;probe&nbsp;or&nbsp;substrate&nbsp;of interest to a specific biomolecule, a process called&nbsp;bioconjugation. The possibility of attaching dyes&nbsp;and other&nbsp;reporter molecules&nbsp;has made click chemistry a very powerful tool for identifying, locating, and characterizing both old and new biomolecules. The classic click reaction is the copper-catalyzed reaction of an&nbsp;azide&nbsp;with an&nbsp;alkyne&nbsp;to form a 5-membered&nbsp;heteroatom&nbsp;ring, this reaction is commonly called Cu(I)-Catalyzed Azide-Alkyne&nbsp;Cycloaddition&nbsp;(CuAAC).