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Tag-lite CLIP-Red Labeling Reagent, 20 nmoles

SNAP-Tag, Clip-Tag, and HALO-Tag are protein labeling systems enabling the covalent attachement of fluorophores onto proteins of interest. CLIP-Red enables CLIP-tagged proteins to become labeled with a red fluorophore.

Feature Specification
Application Receptor-Ligand Binding

SNAP-Tag, Clip-Tag, and HALO-Tag are protein labeling systems enabling the covalent attachement of fluorophores onto proteins of interest. CLIP-Red enables CLIP-tagged proteins to become labeled with a red fluorophore.

Product Variants
Unit Size: 20 nmol
Part #:
SCLPREDE
Unit Size: 100 nmol
Part #:
SCLPREDF
Unit Size: 500 nmol
Part #:
SCLPREDZ
For research use only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.
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Overview

Over the past few years, SNAP-Tag, CLIP-Tag, and Halo-Tag technologies combined with TR-FRET have paved the road to the development of many non-radioactive, no-wash binding assays. The method is based on transfecting cells using plasmids encoding a SNAP-Tag (or CLIP-Tag, or Halot-Tag) and subsequently labeling them with acceptors or donors. CLIP-Red allows the labeling of CLIP-Tagged proteins with a red fluorophore.

Specifications

Application
Receptor-Ligand Binding
Brand
Tag-lite
Detection Modality
HTRF
Product Group
Fluorescent Reagent
Shipping Conditions
Shipped in Dry Ice
Target Class
GPCR
Technology
TR-FRET
Therapeutic Area
Cardiovascular
Infectious Diseases
Metabolism/Diabetes
NASH/Fibrosis
Neuroscience
Oncology & Inflammation
Rare Diseases
Unit Size
20 nmol

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How it works

Receptor labeling

CLIP-tag is a small fusion tag that covalently interacts with specific substrates. CLIP-tag enables the specific and covalent labeling of any protein of interest. Contact your local scientific consultant to receive more information on CLIP-Tag and its applications.

Resources

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Technical Note
A simple method for preparing GPCR membrane model extracts from stable cell lines for use with the HTRF GTP Gi binding assay

G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are crucial transmembrane proteins involved in cellular signal transduction.

This technical...

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