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View additional product information for Amplex™ Red and Amplex™ UltraRed Reagents - FAQs (A36006, A22177, A12222)
8 product FAQs found
The components of Krebs-Ringer buffer (salts) should not cause oxidation of the Amplex reagent (which, in the presence of peroxidase and H2O2 oxidizes to resorufin, which is pink in color and fluorescent). Try water alone (the water used to make the Krebs-Ringer buffer). Since Hank's Buffered Saline Solution is typically purchased rather than made in the lab, it likely would not have the same contaminant. Another option is to degas the buffer prior to use to removed dissolved oxygen radicals.
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Yes it can be used for a colorimetric assay. In general, absorbance is less sensitive than fluorescence so the sensitivity of the colorimetric assay may be lower. You may need to empirically determine the detection limit and linear dynamic range for the colorimetric assay. Resorufin, the fluorescent product of Amplex Red, has an absorbance peak at 570 nm.
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Either the horseradish peroxidase or other enzymes in the assay may not be active, the H2O2 may have degraded, or the sample could have some component that is consuming H2O2 or inactivating the enzymes required for the assay. We recommend that you check when the reagent was purchased and how it was stored prior to use; the reagent should not be used past the warranty period.
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Amplex Red is cell impermeant, but also its conversion to resorufin requires direct contact with the reaction of peroxidase with H2O2 (in solution, at the surface, or within cells). Within cells, peroxidases and H2O2 may not be sufficiently localized or active to provide enough signal.
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Unless you are specifically analyzing catalase activity, as with the Amplex Red Catalase Assay Kit (Cat. No. A22180), the assay should be devoid of catalases. Catalases compete with the horseradish peroxidase for H2O2; the conversion of Amplex Red to resorufin requires the reaction of horseradish peroxidase with H2O2.
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We recommend storing Amplex Red Reagent under vacuum (anaerobic conditions) and dehydrated. Do not store Amplex Red Reagent in solution.
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Amplex Red Reagent is white/off-white or slightly pink (due to minor spontaneous oxidation during storage/shipping).
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This is not recommended. The presence of endogenous proteases can complicate the assay by degrading the horseradish peroxidase (HRP). Endogenous peroxidases and antioxidants can modify the H2O2 required for the reaction, competing with HRP (and catalase) for the substrate.
The Amplex Red Assays are best performed with either purified enzymes or extracted H2O2 in a defined buffer system, extracellular solutions or body fluids (media, serum, etc.) that do not exhibit high levels of endogenous protease or oxidase activity and do not contain antioxidants.
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