PDE3B Assay Kit

Catalog #
60331
$425 *
Size: 96 reactions
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*US Pricing only. For international pricing, please contact your local distributor.
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Description

The PDE3B Assay Kit is designed for identification of PDE3B inhibitors using fluorescence polarization. The assay is based on the binding of a fluorescent nucleotide monophosphate generated by PDE3B to the binding agent. The key to the PDE3B Assay Kit is the specific binding agent. Using this kit, only two simple steps on a microtiter plate are required for PDE3B reactions. First, the fluorescently labeled cAMP is incubated with a sample containing PDE3B for 1 hour. Second, binding agent is added to the reaction mix to produce a change in fluorescent polarization that can then be measured using a fluorescence reader equipped for the measurement of fluorescence polarization.

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Synonyms
inhibitor screening, assay kit, PDE3B, PDE3-B, PDE
Product Info
Storage and Usage
Citations
Assay Kit Format
Fluorescence Polarization
Supplied As
The PDE3B inhibitor screening assay kit comes in a convenient 96-well format, withpurified PDE3B enzyme, fluorescently labeled PDE3 substrate (cAMP), binding agent,and PDE assay buffer for 100 enzyme reactions.
Format

Assay Kit Components

UniProt #
Q14432
Background
Phosphodiesterases (PDEs) play an important role in dynamic regulation of cAMP and cGMP signaling. PDE3B, also known as cGMP-inhibited phosphodiesterase, is involved in mediating the anti-lipolytic and anti-glycogenolytic effects of insulin in adipose and liver tissues. Phosphodiesterases catalyze the hydrolysis of the phosphodiester bond in dye-labeled cyclic monophosphates. Beads selectively bind the phosphate group in the nucleotide product. This increases the size of the nucleotide relative to unreacted cyclic monophosphate. In the polarization assay, dye molecules with absorption transition vectors parallel to the linearly-polarized excitation light are selectively excited. Dyes attached to the rapidly-rotating cyclic monophosphates will obtain random orientations and emit light with low polarization. Dyes attached to the slowly-rotating nucleotide-bead complexes will not have time to reorient and therefore will emit highly polarized light.
References
Maurice DH. Front. Biosci. 2005; 10:1221-8.