Human Endogenous Metabolite Compound Library

Réf. Cat.L4500

840 petites collections de métabolites endogènes humains, impliquant de multiples voies métaboliques, qui peuvent être utilisées pour le criblage à haut débit, ouvrant de nouvelles voies pour l'homme dans le traitement de diverses maladies telles que les tumeurs.

96 well plates

Personnalisez votre bibliothèque:

Cité par 322 Publications

Description & Avantages

• A unique collection of 840 human endogenous metabolites for high-throughput screening and high content screening (HCS)
 
• Used for metabonomics and metabolism-related research
 
• For studying human metabolic diseases, exploring the pathogenesis of diseases such as cancer,and opening noval therapeutic ways 
 
• Structurally diverse, medicinally active,and cell permeable
 
• Rich documentation with structure description,target information, IC50 values and customer reviews
 
• NMR and HPLC validated to ensure high purity

 

Détails du produit

Formulation 687 compounds pre-dissolved in 10mM DMSO, 138 compounds pre-dissolved in 10mM water, 12 compounds pre-dissolved in 2mM DMSO and 3 compounds pre-dissolved in 2mM water
Conteneur Plaque à 96 puits profonds scellée avec du papier daluminium
Stabilité 12 months -20°C in DMSO
24 months -80°C in DMSO
Expédition Glace bleue ou glace sèche

Études de cas utilisant les bibliothèques de composés Selleck

Human Endogenous Metabolite Compound Library Composition

Partenaires de linstallation HTS

  • Collaborating with Seleck: Yale University | Yale Center for Molecular Discovery
  • Collaborating with Seleck: Carbone Cancer Center | University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Collaborating with Seleck: University of Colorado Denver | CU Denver
  • Collaborating with Seleck: Leibniz-Forschungsinstitut für Molekulare Pharmakologie: Leibniz-FMP
  • Collaborating with Seleck: UCSF_University of California San Francisco
  • Collaborating with Seleck: KU | High Throughput Screening Laboratory
  • Collaborating with Seleck: CIBIO
  • Collaborating with Seleck: Perelman school of medicine | University of Pennsylvania