Lycopersicon Esculentum (Tomato) Lectin (LEL, TL), DyLight 649

Tomato lectin (from Lycopersicon esculentum) is an effective marker of blood vessels and microglial cells in rodents. Conjugation of the lectin with a fluorophore facilitates fast, one-step detection and visualization using intravascular perfusion methods or direct application to tissue sections.

DyLight 649 labeled tomato lectin has an appropriate number of fluorochromes bound to provide the optimum staining characteristics for this lectin. This conjugate is supplied essentially free of unconjugated fluorochromes.

• Excitation maximum: 655 nm
• Emission maximum: 670 nm
• Color: Far red

$209.00

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SKU: DL-1178-1
Molecular Weight
71
Color of Fluorescence
Far Red
Extinction Coefficient
0.76
Formulation
10 mM HEPES, 0.15 M NaCl, pH 7.5, 0.08% sodium azide, 0.1 mM CaCl2.
Inhibiting or Eluting Sugar
Chitin Hydrolysate
Maximum Emission
670 nm
Maximum Excitation
655 nm
Unit Size
1 mg
Storage Instructions
2-8 °C
Sugar Specificity
Chitin oligomers, type 2 polyLacNAc, and Type 2 LacdiNAc
Usage Summary
The recommended concentration range for use is 5-20 µg/ml. If a precipitate forms upon long-term storage, warm to 37 ºC.
Applications
Immunofluorescence, Glycobiology
Concentration
1 mg active conjugate/ml
Conjugate
DyLight 649
Technical Information

Tomato lectin is a very stable single subunit glycoprotein containing about 50 percent arabinose and galactose and may form multimeric aggregates in solution. Tomato lectin, although sharing some specificities with potato lectin, Datura lectin, and wheat germ agglutinin, has been reported to be dissimilar in many respects. LEL binds well to glycophorin and Tamm-Horsfall glycoprotein.

DyLight 649 conjugated tomato lectin emits in the far red and is an excellent second label in systems with green/yellow fluorescence such as GFP expressed in transgenic animals, or with fluorescein conjugates in standard double label studies. The tomato lectin complements our existing range of lectin reagents and should be a valuable tool in examining rodent tumor angiogenesis, tracing neovascular development in xenograft models and brain research.

Accompanying each fluorescent lectin is an analysis data sheet summarizing the results of our quality control tests and providing pertinent information on the product. All of these reagents are supplied as solutions preserved with sodium azide.

Inhibiting/Eluting Sugar: Chitin Hydrolysate

Product FAQs

The Lycopersicon esculentum (tomato) lectin has been widely reported as an effective blood vessel marker for in vivo vascular perfusion studies in rodent species. Investigators have primarily utilized one of the fluorophore conjugated tomato lectin formats to trace blood vasculature in normal and diseased animals via tail vein or intracardiac injection. However, the biotinylated format has also been used. It allows for flexibility in subsequent visualization by way of either fluorescence or enzyme-based methods. Published references are best source for procedural details. Examples of references where biotinylated tomato lectins have been applied via in vivo perfusion are featured below: Robertson, R.T., et al. (2014) Histochem. Cell Biol. 143(2) Thurston, G., et al. (1998) Am. J Pathol. 153(4):1099-1112