APExBIO Technology

APExBIO. As a premier provider of small molecule inhibitors/activators, compound libraries, peptides, assay kits, fluorescent labels, enzymes, modified nucleotides, and various tools for molecular biology, APExBIO empowers researchers to achieve perfection and explore the unknown. Here are some highlights:

  • Product Range: APExBIO offers a wide range of featured products, including compound libraries, fluorescent labels, enzymes, and modified nucleotides. They cover over 1,000 inhibitors/activators across 23 signaling pathways from various research areas.

  • Signaling Pathways: Detailed signaling pathway maps highlight the latest research progress, making it easier for scientists to navigate their offerings.

 


Website: www.apexbt.com

 
Reducing agents

Reducing agents

 

There are a number of reducing agents such as DTT (dithiothreitol), DTE (dithioerythritol), L-glutathione (GSH), TCEP (Tris (2-carboxyethyl) phosphine hydrochloride), 2-mercaptoethanol. By definition, reducing agents are elements or compounds that give an electron to an oxidizing compound. A compound can therefore be "reduced" (lose an electron) to create an "oxidized" state and the reaction can usually be reversed by "oxidizing" (giving an electron) a compound back to its "reduced" state. At the protein level, reducing agents are often essential for cleaving the disulfide bonds between the amino acids in cysteine. This effect is probably felt most often by non-scientists in the form of a chemical perm, in which the hair is chemically straightened (reducing the disulfide bonds that cause the hair to curl), then curled (oxidized to restore these disulfide bonds) into a specific structure. Because of the difficulty in reducing disulfide bonds that are deeply buried, reduction is often performed in the presence of high temperatures or denaturants such as guanidine-HCl or urea to help linearize the protein so that the reducing agent can work more effectively.