SYTO™ Green Fluorescent Nucleic Acid Stains
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SYTO™ Green Fluorescent Nucleic Acid Stains
Invitrogen™

SYTO™ Green Fluorescent Nucleic Acid Stains

SYTO Green Fluorescent Nucleic Acid Stains exhibit bright, green fluorescence upon binding to nucleic acids. These dyes are cell-permeant and can be used to stain RNA and DNA in live cells, dead cells, and bacteria.
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Catalog NumberDye TypeQuantity
S7573SYTO 11 Green250 μL
S34854SYTO 9 Green100 μL
S7574SYTO 12 Green315 μL
S7575SYTO 13 Green250 μL
S7576SYTO 14 Green250 μL
S7578SYTO 16 Green250 μL
S7556SYTO 21 Green250 μL
S7559SYTO 24 Green250 μL
S34855SYTO BC Green100 μL
S32703SYTO RNASelect Green100 μL
S7572SYTO Green Dyes 11-14, 16, 21, 24, and 251 Kit (50 μL each)
Catalog number S7573
Price (CNY)
4,746.00
Each
Add to cart
Dye Type:
SYTO 11 Green
Quantity:
250 μL
Price (CNY)
4,746.00
Each
Add to cart

The SYTO Green Fluorescent Nucleic Acid Stains exhibit bright, green fluorescence upon binding to nucleic acids. These dyes are cell-permeant and can be used to stain RNA and DNA in live cells, dead cells, and bacteria. Because the dye characteristics and staining pattern of the SYTO dyes may vary, we offer 10 different SYTO Green Fluorescent Nucleic Acid Stains available individually along with the SYTO Green Fluorescent Nucleic Acid Stain Sampler Kit #1 (containing SYTO 11–14, 16, 21, 24, and 25) to enable researchers to find the most appropriate green-fluorescent SYTO stain for their system . We also provide the SYTOX Green Nucleic Acid Stain (Cat. No. S7020 and R37109), which is a cell-impermeant green-fluorescent stain used for staining dead cells or performing nuclear counterstaining in fixed cells.

SYTO Green Fluorescent Nucleic Acid Stains are cell-permeant nucleic acid stains that show a large fluorescence enhancement upon binding nucleic acids. The SYTO dyes can be used to stain RNA and DNA in both live and dead eukaryotic cells, as well as in Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria.

The SYTO stains share several important characteristics:

  • Permeability to virtually all cell membranes, including mammalian cells and bacteria
  • High molar absorptivity, with extinction coefficients >50,000 cm-1 M-1 at visible absorption maxima
  • Extremely low intrinsic fluorescence, with quantum yields typically <0.01 when not bound to nucleic acids
  • Quantum yields that are typically >0.4 when bound to nucleic acids.

SYTO Green-Fluorescent Nucleic Acid Stains excitation/emission wavelengths

  • SYTO 9—RNA 486/501 nm; DNA 485/498 nm
  • SYTO 11—RNA 510/530 nm; DNA 508/527 nm
  • SYTO 12—RNA 500/519 nm; DNA 499/522 nm
  • SYTO 13—RNA 491/514 nm; DNA 488/509 nm
  • SYTO 14—RNA 521/547 nm; DNA 517/549 nm
  • SYTO 16—RNA 494/525 nm; DNA 488/518 nm
  • SYTO 21—DNA 494/517 nm
  • SYTO 24—DNA 490/515 nm
  • SYTO BC—RNA 487/504 nm; DNA 485/500 nm
  • SYTO RNASelect—RNA 490/530 nm

SYTO dyes differ from each other in one or more characteristics, including cell permeability, fluorescence enhancement upon binding nucleic acids, excitation and emission spectra, DNA/RNA selectivity, and binding affinity. The SYTO dyes are compatible with a variety of fluorescence-based instruments that use laser excitation or a conventional broadband illumination source (e.g., mercury- and xenon-arc lamps). Filter sets that are suitable for imaging cells labeled with fluorescein (FITC), Alexa Fluor 488, or GFP will work well for imaging cells stained with SYTO Green Nucleic Acid Stains.

SYTO nucleic acid stains have been used in diverse applications from staining DNA spotted on microarrays to staining live and fixed cells. The SYTO dyes do not act exclusively as nuclear stains in live cells and should not be equated with DNA-selective compounds such as DAPI (Cat. Nos. D1306, D21490) or Hoechst 33342 (Cat. Nos. H1399, H3570), which stain nuclei in live animal cells. Eukaryotic cells incubated with SYTO dyes generally show cytoplasmic or mitochondrial staining, as well as nuclear staining. The SYTO Green Fluorescent Nucleic Acid Stains have proven valuable in a broad range of research applications as well as used in flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy.

Specific staining applications for some of the SYTO Green Fluorescent Nucleic Acid Stains

The SYTO 9 stain has been shown to stain live and dead Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. It is a component of the LIVE/DEAD BacLight Bacterial Viability Kits (Cat. Nos. L7007, L7012, L13152).

The SYTO 11 stain (Cat. No. S7573) has been used in conjunction with time-lapse microscopy to examine the cleavage orientation of dividing cells in the developing cerebral cortex.

The SYTO 13 stain (Cat. No. S7575) has been used in combination with propidium iodide (Cat. Nos. P1304, P3566) to monitor glutamate-induced necrosis in cerebellar granule cells.

The SYTO 14 stain (Cat. No. S7576) binds to cytoplasmic RNA, allowing its use in tracking RNA granule transport in living neurons.

Several reports describe the use of SYTO dyes for detecting apoptosis. A series of SYTO nucleic acid stains was screened for the ability to discriminate between apoptotic and non-apoptotic mouse thymocytes, and the SYTO 16 stain (Cat. no. S7578) was found to be optimal for this application. The SYTO 16 stain has also been used with propidium iodide to differentiate live and dead COS-7 cells with a laser-based scanning cytometer.

The SYTO BC Green Fluorescent Nucleic Acid Stain is a mixture of some of our best SYTO dyes for bacterial staining and is a component of the Bacteria Counting Kit (Cat. No. B7277) for bacterial counting in flow cytometry.

The SYTO RNASelect Green Fluorescent Cell Stain is a cell-permeant nucleic acid stain that selectively stains RNA. Although virtually nonfluorescent in the absence of nucleic acids, the SYTO RNASelect stain exhibits bright green fluorescence when bound to RNA (absorption/emission maxima ∼490/530 nm), but only a weak fluorescent signal when bound to DNA. It has been used for staining RNA cargo in exosomes in both live cell samples and isolated exosomes.

SYTO Green Fluorescent Nucleic Acid Stain Sampler Kit

The SYTO Green Fluorescent Nucleic Acid Stain Sampler Kit #1 contains our collection of cell-permeant, green-fluorescent SYTO nucleic acid stains. Because the dyes may demonstrate different staining behaviors with various tissues and cells, it may be necessary to test the dyes to find the optimal dye for a specific application. The kit contains 50 μL each of SYTO 11–14, 16, 21, 24, and 25 dyes.

Any physiological buffer between pH 7.0–8.0, including PBS, can be used to dilute the SYTO dyes for the staining solution.

For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.
Specifications
ColorGreen
Concentration5 mM solution in DMSO
Detection MethodFluorescence
Dye TypeSYTO 11 Green
EmissionDNA: 527 nm, RNA: 530 nm
Excitation Wavelength RangeDNA: 508 nm, RNA: 510 nm
For Use With (Application)Fluorescent Labeling, Live Cell Imaging, Microarray
For Use With (Equipment)Fluorescence Microscope, High Content Imager, Flow Cytometer
Product LineSYTO
Quantity250 μL
Shipping ConditionRoom Temperature
Storage BufferDMSO
Volume (Metric)250 μL
Label TypeFluorescent Dye
Product TypeNucleic Acid Stain
SubCellular LocalizationNucleic Acids
Unit SizeEach
Contents & Storage
Store in freezer at -5°C to -30°C and protect from light.

Frequently asked questions (FAQs)

How do SYTO dyes bind to DNA?

The binding mode of SYTO nucleic acid stains is unknown. However, the behavior of these and related nucleic acid dyes suggests the following binding properties:

1.They appear to contact the solvent (suggested by sensitivity to salt, divalent cations, and in particular, SDS) and thus are likely to have contacts in the grooves.
2.All SYTO dyes appear to show some base selectivity and are thus likely to have minor groove contacts.
3.They can be removed from nucleic acid via ethanol precipitation; this characteristic is not shared by ethidium bromide and other intercalators. Likewise, the dyes are not removed from nucleic acid via butanol or chloroform extraction. These extraction methods do remove ethidium bromide from nucleic acid. 4. SYTO binding is not affected by nonionic detergents.
5. SYTO dyes are not quenched by BrdU, so they do not bind nucleic acids in precisely the same way as Hoechst 33342 and DAPI ((4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole).

SYBR Green I has shown little mutagenicity on frameshift indicator strains, indicating that it isn't likely to strongly intercalate.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Cell Analysis Support Center.

Citations & References (31)

Citations & References
Abstract
A cluster of noninvoluting endocytic cells at the margin of the zebrafish blastoderm marks the site of embryonic shield formation.
Authors:Cooper MS,D'Amico LA
Journal:Developmental biology
PubMed ID:8948584
Abnormal regulation of retinoic acid receptor beta2 expression and compromised allograft rejection in transgenic mice expressing antisense sequences to retinoic acid receptor beta1 and beta3.
Authors:Bérard J, Luo H, Chen H, Mukuna M, Bradley WE, Wu J
Journal:J Immunol
PubMed ID:9300677
Transgenic mice carrying antisense sequences common to the retinoic acid receptors (RAR) beta1 and beta3 were produced to examine roles of RARbeta1 and beta3 in the immune system. There were no significant changes of endogenous RARbeta1/beta3 expression at the mRNA level in T cells, B cells, and macrophages of the ... More
Nucleic acid dyes for detection of apoptosis in live cells.
Authors:Frey T
Journal:Cytometry
PubMed ID:8582249
'Apoptotic thymocytes were found to be much dimmer than normal thymocytes when stained with several nucleic acid dyes. These dyes provide a quick and simple assay for apoptosis which works for live cells and does not require a UV laser. The collection of dyes giving this staining pattern includes reagents ... More
Multiparameter detection of apoptosis using red-excitable SYTO probes.
Authors:Wlodkowic D, Skommer J, Hillier C, Darzynkiewicz Z,
Journal:Cytometry A
PubMed ID:18431792
'Functional assays allowing phenotypic characterization of different cell death parameters at a single-cell level are important tools for preclinical anticancer drug screening. Currently, the selection of cytometric assays is limited by the availability of fluorescent probes with overlapping spectral characteristics. Following on our earlier reports on green and orange fluorescent ... More
Cleavage orientation and the asymmetric inheritance of Notch1 immunoreactivity in mammalian neurogenesis.
Authors:Chenn A, McConnell SK
Journal:Cell
PubMed ID:7664342
'Neurons in the mammalian central nervous system are generated from progenitor cells near the lumen of the neural tube. Time-lapse microscopy of dividing cells in slices of developing cerebral cortex reveals that cleavage orientation predicts the fates of daughter cells. Vertical cleavages produce behaviorally and morphologically identical daughters that resemble ... More