Content #1
Content #1
Content #1
Kits for labeling & purification of near-IR antibody conjugates for small animal in vivo imaging, featuring Biotium’s industry-leading near-IR CF® Dyes.
This labeling kit contains reagents for labeling antibodies with our superior near-infrared amine-reactive CF® dyes for small animal in vivo imaging. Learn more about Biotium’s superior Near-IR CF® dyes.
See our full line of Antibody & Protein Labeling Kits.
| Product | Ex/Em | Size | Catalog No. | 
|---|---|---|---|
| CF®680 VivoBrite™ Rapid Antibody Labeling Kit  for Small Animal In Vivo Imaging  | 681/698 nm | 3 x 1 mg labelings | 92160 | 
| CF®750 VivoBrite™ Rapid Antibody Labeling Kit  for Small Animal In Vivo Imaging  | 755/777 nm | 3 x 1 mg labelings | 92161 | 
| CF®770 VivoBrite™ Rapid Antibody Labeling Kit  for Small Animal In Vivo Imaging  | 770/797 nm | 3 x 1 mg labelings | 92162 | 
| CF®790 VivoBrite™ Rapid Antibody Labeling Kit  for Small Animal In Vivo Imaging  | 784/806 nm | 3 x 1 mg labelings | 92163 | 
| Product  Name  | Label  Options  | Labeling  Scale  | Labeling  Time  | Features | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mix-n-Stain™ CF® Dye  Antibody Labeling Kits  | CF® Dyes | ≤5-20 ug IgG 20-50 ug IgG 50-100 ug IgG  | ~ 15 min. | •     Rapid, simple labeling  • No purification • Tolerates BSA & other additives • Dyes for super-resolution, spectral flow, & NIR detection  | 
| Mix-n-Stain™ FITC  Antibody Labeling Kits  | FITC | |||
| Mix-n-Stain™ Cyanine Dye Antibody Labeling Kits  | Cyanine 555 Cyanine 647  | 
|||
| Mix-n-Stain™ Biotin  Antibody Labeling Kits  | Biotin | |||
| Mix-n-Stain™ Digoxigenin Antibody Labeling Kits  | Digoxygenin (DIG) | |||
| Mix-n-Stain™ DNP Antibody Labeling Kits  | DNP | |||
| Mix-n-Stain™ Maxi  Antibody Labeling Kits  | CF® Dyes Cyanine Dyes  | 1 mg IgG | ~ 30 min. | |
| Mix-n-Stain™ CF® Dye IgM Antibody Labeling Kits | CF® Dyes FITC  | 25 ug IgM 100 ug IgM  | 15-30 min. | •     Rapid, simple labeling  • No purification  | 
| Mix-n-Stain™ STORM CF® Dye Antibody Labeling Kits | CF® Dyes | 50 ug IgG | ~ 30 min. | •     Optimized to provide low 1-2.5 DOL • No purification  | 
| Mix-n-Stain™  Nanobody Labeling Kits  | CF® Dyes | 5-20 ug Nanobody® 20-50 ug Nanobody®  | ~ 30 min. | •     Optimized for Nanobodies®  • Tolerates BSA & other additives  | 
| Mix-n-Stain™  Nanobody Thiol Labeling Kits  | CF® Dyes | ~ 2 hours | • Optimized for Nanobodies® with single exposed cysteine residue | |
| Mix-n-Stain™  Small Ligand Labeling Kits  | CF® Dyes | 0.1 umol  small ligand  | ~ 30 min. | •     Label SNAP®, CLIP™, HaloTag® & other small ligands • Dye options for surface or intracellular targets  | 
| VivoBrite™ Rapid Antibody Labeling Kits for Small Animal In Vivo Imaging | Near-IR CF® Dyes | 3 x 1 mg IgG | ~ 2 hours | •     Dyes, buffers, & spin vials for labeling + purification • Sterile syringes, filters and storage vials for in vivo use  | 
| CF® Dye & Biotin SE  Protein Labeling Kits  | CF® Dyes Biotin  | 3 x 1 mg  protein  | ~ 2 hours | • Dyes, buffers, & spin vials for labeling + purification | 
1.	J Immunother Cancer (2019) 7, 55. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40425-019-0537-9
2.	Biomolecules (2020) 10, 51. doi:10.3390/biom10010051
Download a list of CF® dye references.
1.	J Immunother Cancer (2019) 7, 55. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40425-019-0537-9
2.	Biomolecules (2020) 10, 51. doi:10.3390/biom10010051
Download a list of CF® dye references.
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:
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.
Dyes that carry multiple negative charges can introduce background. Usually, this is more of a concern with labeled antibodies that carry many dyes, as opposed to a small toxin like bungarotoxin. When staining tissues, the endogenous autofluorescence of the tissue itself is often the most significant source of background. Endogenous fluorescence background in tissue is usually highest in the blue wavelengths (DAPI channel) and lowest in the far-red (Cy®5 channel). Our CF®633 bungarotoxin (catalog no. 00009) is a far-red conjugate for the Cy®5 channel with a low negative charge that should have low background from either the dye or autofluorescence.
We test fluorescent bungarotoxin on rat skeletal muscle sections. While the tissue shows autofluorescence, the bungarotoxin staining of motor endplates is usually much brighter than the background for all of the dye colors we’ve tested. However, if you are staining human tissue (especially brain), lipofuscin autofluorescence may be bright in all channels. This usually shows up as bright, punctate dots around cell nuclei. While we would usually recommend our TrueBlack® lipofuscin quenchers for human brain tissue, they are not compatible with bungarotoxin staining. We have, however, found that EverBrite TrueBlack® Mounting Medium (cat. no. 23017) can be used to mount skeletal muscle sections stained with bungarotoxin.
Cy Dye is a registered trademark of Cytiva.
We do not have firsthand experience with LPS labeling, but according to the literature, LPS has been labeled using amine-reactive dyes, like FITC. Our amine-reactive CF® Dye Succinimidyl Esters should also work for this. There is a publication for enzymatic labeling of LPS using dye hydrazides. Our CF® Dye hydrazides could be used in this method. The paper also describes the traditional amine labeling method and purification of the conjugate.