Menu
biotium logo
Antibody Finder
Menu

Phaseolus Vulgaris Leucoagglutinin (PHA-L) Conjugates

PHA-L triggers lymphocyte agglutination and is available conjugated to biotin and a selection of 6 bright and photostable CF® Dyes.

Conjugation
Size
Catalog #
price
Qty
1 mL
Clear selection

Add to Cart
This product is available by special order only.

Please fill in the inquiry form and we will contact you shortly.

Product Description

Phaseolus vulgaris (red kidney bean) agglutinin (phytohemagglutinin; PHA) is a family of lectins, each consisting of four subunits. There are two different types of subunits. The “E” (erythroagglutinin) subunit causes red cell agglutination, and the “L” (lymphocyte) subunit can trigger lymphocyte agglutination and mitogenic activity. These subunits combine to produce five isolectins. Phaseolus vulgaris Leucoagglutinin (PHA-L) has four “L” type subunits and does not agglutinate red blood cells but is a potent mitogen and triggers lymphocyte agglutination. The lectin may be used to stain tissue sections. Biotium offers PHA-L conjugated to biotin and a selection of 6 bright and photostable CF® Dyes.

  • Used to stimulate lymphocyte and T cell proliferation
  • Suitable for immunofluorescence staining in tissue sections
  • Choice of 6 CF® Dyes or biotin
  • Supplied at 1 mg/mL in 10 mM HEPES pH 7.5, 0.15 M NaCl, 0.08% sodium azide, 0.1 mM CaCl2

Note: CF® Dye PHA-L conjugates are formulated with sodium azide and are not suitable for use in vivo or live cell culture.

Find the Right Stain for Your Application

PHA-L and other lectins are carbohydrate binding proteins that recognize specific sugar moieties on glycoproteins.  The presence and distribution of these targets vary between cell types and tissues. As a result, other cell surface stains or other lectin conjugates, Datura stramonium lectin (DSL), Lycopersicon esculentum (Tomato), Ulex europaeus agglutinin I (UEA I), Wheat Germ Agglutinin (WGA) conjugates, Concanavalin A (Con A) and Arachis hypogaea (PNA) conjugates, may produce better surface staining and may be more appropriate for your cell type. Lectin conjugates can be used to selectively stain the cell surface of live cells, and withstand fixation and permeabilization. When cells are fixed and permeabilized before staining, fluorescent lectins stain both cell surface and organelles in the secretory pathway. Lectins may be toxic or stimulatory to live cells depending on cell type. To find the right stain for your application, see our Membrane & Cell Surface Stains Comparison. See our Cellular Stains Table for more information on how our dyes stain various organisms.

Superior CF® Dyes

Biotium’s next-generation CF® Dyes were designed to be highly water-soluble with advantages in brightness and photostability compared to other fluorescent dyes. Learn more about CF® Dyes.

Phaseolus Vulgaris Leucoagglutinin (PHA-L) Conjugates

ConjugationEx/EmSizeCatalog No.Dye Features
CF®488A490/516 nm1 mL29115CF®488A Features
CF®568562/584 nm1 mL29116CF®568 Features
CF®594593/615 nm1 mL29117CF®594 Features
CF®640R642/663 nm1 mL29118CF®640R Features
CF®680681/698 nm1 mL29119CF®680 Features
CF®740742/767 nm1 mL29134CF®740 Features
BiotinN/A1 mL29114

Full List of Lectin Conjugates

ProductFeatures
CF® Dye Concanavalin A (Con A)• Cell surface stain for yeast, fungi, and mammalian cells
• Selectively binds to a-mannopyranosyl and a-glucopyranosy residues
• Available with a wide selection of CF® Dyes
CF® Dye Wheat Germ Agglutinin (WGA)• Cell surface stain for mammalian cells and gram+ bacteria
• Also stains yeast bud scars
• Has high affinity for sialic acid and N-acetylglucosamine
• Choose from a wide selection of CF® Dyes or HRP
CF® Dye Peanut Lectin (PNA) from Arachis hypogaea• Specific for terminal β-galactose and binds preferentially to galactosyl (β-1,3) N-acetylgalactosamine
• Choice of 4 CF® dye colors
CF® Dye Lycopersicon Esculentum (Tomato) Lectin (LEL, TL)• Marker for blood vessels and microglial cells
• Binds to [GlcNAc] 1,3-N-acetylglucosamine, glycophorin, and Tamm-Horsfall glycoprotein
• Used to study tumor angiogenesis or tracing neovascular development in xenograft models
• Choice of 5 CF® Dyes or biotin
CF® Dye Ulex Europaeus Agglutinin I (UEA I)• Marker for human endothelial cells and incompletely differentiated gastrin cells
• Binds to glycoproteins and glycolipids containing α-linked fucose residues
• Choice of 5 CF® Dyes or biotin
CF® Dye Phaseolus Vulgaris Leucoagglutinin (PHA-L)• Used to stimulate lymphocyte and T cell proliferation
• Choice of 5 CF® Dyes or biotin
CF® Dye Datura Stramonium Lectin (DSL)• Binds to (beta-1,4) linked N-acetylglucosamine oligomers
• Choice of 5 CF® Dyes or biotin
CF® Dye Sambucus Nigra Lectin (SNA, EBL))• Binds to sialic acid attached to terminal galactose
• Choice of 6 CF® Dyes or biotin
CF is a registered trademark of Biotium, Inc.

Product Attributes

Size
1 mL
Conjugation
CF®488A, CF®568, CF®594, CF®640R, CF®680, CF®740, Biotin
Probe cellular localization
Membrane/cell surface
For live or fixed cells
For fixed cells, For live/intact cells
Cell permeability
Membrane impermeant
Fixation options
Fix before staining (formaldehyde), Fix after staining (formaldehyde), Fix before staining (methanol), Fix after staining (methanol), Permeabilize after staining
Colors
Green, Red, Far-red, Near-infrared

Documents, Protocols, SDS and COA

FAQs

Product shipping, storage, shelf life, & solubility

Bioscience kits
The guaranteed shelf life from date of receipt for bioscience kits is listed on the product information sheet. Some kits have an expiration date printed on the kit box label, this is the guaranteed shelf life date calculated from the day that the product shipped from our facility. Kits often are functional for significantly longer than the guaranteed shelf life. If you have an older kit in storage that you wish to use, we recommend performing a small scale positive control experiment to confirm that the kit still works for your application before processing a large number of samples or precious samples.

Antibodies and other conjugates
The guaranteed shelf life from date of receipt for antibodies and conjugates is listed on the product information sheet. Antibodies and other conjugates often are functional for significantly longer than the guaranteed shelf life. If you have an older conjugate in storage that you wish to use, we recommend performing a small scale positive control experiment to confirm that the product still works for your application before processing a large number of samples or precious samples.

For lyophilized antibodies, we recommend reconstituting the antibody with glycerol and antimicrobial preservative like sodium azide for the longest shelf life (note that sodium azide is not compatible with HRP-conjugates).

Chemicals, dyes, and gel stains
Biotium guarantees the stability of chemicals, dyes, and gel stains for at least a year from the date you receive the product. However, the majority of these products are highly stable for many years, as long as they are stored as recommended. Storage conditions can be found on the product information sheet or product safety and data sheet, material safety data sheet, and on the product label. Fluorescent compounds should be protected from light for long term storage.

If you have a Biotium compound that has been in storage for longer than one year that you wish to use, we recommend performing a small scale positive control experiment to confirm that the compound still works for your application before processing a large number of samples or precious samples.

Expiration date based on date of manufacture (DOM)
If your institution requires you to document expiration date based on date of manufacture for reagents, please contact techsupport@biotium.com for assistance.

Chemical products with special stability considerations:

Esters

Ester compounds include the following:

  • Succinimidyl esters (SE, also known as NHS esters), such as our amine-reactive dyes
  • Acetoxymethyl esters (AM esters), such as our membrane-permeable ion indicator dyes
  • Diacetate-modified dyes, like ViaFluor™ 405, CFDA, and CFDA-SE cell viability/cell proliferation dyes

Ester dyes are stable in solid form as long as they are protected from light and moisture. Esters are not stable in aqueous solution. Concentrated stock solutions should be prepared in anhydrous DMSO (see Biotium catalog no. 90082). Stock solutions in anhydrous DMSO can be stored desiccated at -20°C for one month or longer. Esters should be diluted in aqueous solution immediately before use. Succinimidyl esters (SE) should be dissolved in a solution that is free of amine-containing compounds like Tris, glycine, or protein, which will react with the SE functional group. AM esters and diacetate compounds should be dissolved in a solution that is free of serum, because serum could contain esterases that would hydrolyze the compound.

A note on CF® Dye succinimidyl ester stability

Succinimidyl esters (SE) are generally susceptible to hydrolysis, which can result in lower labeling efficiency. Many commercially available fluorescent dyes used for life science research are heavily sulfonated dyes which makes them particularly hygroscopic, worsening the hydrolysis problem. In addition, for several commercially available SE reactive dyes, the SE group is derived from an aromatic carboxylic acid, while the SE group in all of Biotium’s CF® Dyes is prepared from an aliphatic carboxylic acid. This structural difference reduces the susceptibility of CF® Dye SE reactive groups to hydrolysis, resulting in relatively stable reactive dyes with consistently higher labeling efficiency compared to other SE derivatives of other fluorescent dyes.

Maleimides, MTS and thiosulfate dyes
Like the succinimidyl ester dyes, these dyes are also susceptible to hydrolysis, although generally to a much lower degree. Thus, for long term storage, anhydrous DMSO is recommended for making stock solutions.

Other reactive dyes
Amines, aminooxy (also known as oxylamine), hydrazide, azide, alkyne, BCN, and tyramide reactive dyes, as well as dye free acids, are generally stable in aqueous solution when stored at -20°C for 6-12 months or longer, as long as no compounds are present that may react with the dye’s functional group. See the product information sheets for specific reactive dyes more information.

Coelenterazines and D-luciferin

Coelenterazines are stable in solid form when stored as recommended; they are not stable in aqueous solution. Concentrated coelenterazine stock solutions (typically 1-100 mg/mL) should be prepared in ethanol or methanol; do not use DMSO or DMF to dissolve coelenterazines, because these solvents will oxidize the compounds. Ethanol or methanol stocks of coelenterazine can be stored at -20°C or below for six months or longer; alcohol stocks may evaporate during storage, so use tightly sealing screw cap vials and wrap the vials with Parafilm for long term storage. Propylene glycol also can be used as a solvent to minimize evaporation. If the solvent evaporates, the coelenterazine will still be present in the vial, so note the volume in the vial prior to storage so that you can adjust the solvent volume to correct for evaporation if needed. Prepare working solutions in aqueous buffers immediately before use. Coelenterazines are stable for up to five hours in aqueous solution.

Aquaphile™ coelenterazines are water soluble formulations of coelenterazines. They are stable in solid form when stored as recommended. Aquaphile™ coelenterazines should be dissolved in aqueous solution immediately before use. They are stable for up to five hours in aqueous solution.

Note that coelenterazines are predominantly yellow solids, but may contain dark red or brown flecks. This does not affect product stability or performance. If your coelenterazine is uniformly brown, then it is oxidized and needs to be replaced.

D-luciferin is stable in solid form and as a concentrated stock solution when stored as recommended; it is not stable at dilute working concentrations in aqueous solution. Prepare concentrated D-luciferin stock solutions (typically 1-100 mg/mL) in water, and store in aliquots at -20°C or below for six months or longer. Prepare working solutions immediately before use.

For dyes or reagents that are supplied lyophilized (as solids), it is hard to compare quantities based on appearance of the dye in the tube, because during the lyophilization process the dye can dry down in different ways, either spread out all over the tube, clumped together, or coating the sides or bottom of the tube. Centrifugation of the tube may not help in collecting the dye solid to the bottom of the tube as this generally works for solutions. However, lyophilized solids are packaged based on highly accurate absorbance measurement of the reagent solution prior to drying, so the vial will contain the correct amount of dye.

Biotium ships all antibodies (primary, secondary and conjugates) at room temperature. We guarantee their quality and performance under these conditions based upon our stability testing. Antibodies were subjected to accelerated stability testing by storing them at various temperatures (4°C, room temperature, or 37°C) for 1 week to mimic simulated shipping conditions and tested in immunostaining experiments. All antibodies showed the expected brightness and specificity, even after storage at sub-optimal temperatures for a week or longer. You can also download our Product Storage Statement here.

In line with our goal to be more environmentally friendly by reducing the use of excess packaging, and lowering shipping costs for our customers, products that have passed our stability testing are shipped at room temperature.

Once you have received the antibody vial, please follow the long-term storage instructions on the product information (PI) sheet.

Can’t find your answer?

Contact Us