Dde Biotin Alkyne

Extraordinary strength of the streptavidin-biotin interaction allows for efficient capturing of even highly dilute targets; however, it makes recovery of proteins from affinity resins challenging. Conventional methods to elute biotinylated proteins from immobilized avidin include the following: (i) denaturation of streptavidin by boiling the resin in a denaturing buffer that may include high concentrations of chaotropic salts, (ii) trypsin digestion of proteins while they are bound to the resin, or (iii) elution of proteins with excess free biotin. These protocols can co-elute contaminant proteins by releasing nonspecifically bound proteins and/or naturally biotinylated proteins concurrently with labeled proteins. In addition, some of these methods can cause elution of high levels of resin-based peptides along with the proteins of interest, resulting in further sample contamination.

Dde Biotin Alkyne probe eliminates a major limitation of the streptavidin-biotin affinity purification. This reagent contains a biotin moiety linked to an alkyne through a spacer arm containing a containing a hydrazine-cleavable Dde moiety.. Captured biomolecules can be efficiently released under mild conditions (2% aqueous hydrazine solution), and the small molecular fragment (55.07 Da) left on the labeled protein following the cleavage. These features make the cleavable probe especially attractive for use in biomolecular labeling and proteomic studies.

Price range: $102.00 through $937.00

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SKU: CCT-1137
CAS Number
N/A
Molecular Weight
650.83
Appearance
Glass-like solid
Chemical Formula
C32H50N4O8S
Molecular Weight Left Behind
55.07
Unit Size
1 mg, 5 mg, 25 mg
Solubility
DMSO, DMF, THF, DCM, Chloroform
Storage Instructions
-20°C.
Shipping Conditions
Ambient temperature
Shipping Instructions
Ambient temperature
Selected References
  1. Yang Y., et al. (2013). Cleavable Trifunctional Biotin Reagents for Protein Labeling, Capture, and Release. Chem. Commun., 48: 5366-86. [PubMed]
  2. Matthew E. G., et al. (2017). Comprehensive Mapping of O-GlcNAc Modification Sites Using a Chemically Cleavable Tag. Mol. Biosyst, 12: 1756–59. [PubMed]
  3. Gertsik N., et al. (2017). Mapping the Binding Site of BMS-708163 on y-Secretase with Cleavable Photoprobes. Cell Chemical Biology, 32: 3-8. [PubMed]