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Invitrogen™ Vybrant™ DiD Cell-Labeling Solution

Catalog No. V22887
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Catalog No. V22887 Supplier Invitrogen™ Supplier No. V22887
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For use with fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry

The Vybrant DiD cell-labeling solution is a dye delivery solution that can be added directly to normal culture media to uniformly label suspended or attached culture cells for use in cell-cell fusion, cellular adhesion and migration applications.

Cell Analysis, Cell Proliferation, Cell Tracing & Tracking, Cell Viability, Proliferation & Function, General Cell Tracing, Microbial Tracking, Neuronal Tracing

Order Info

Shipping Condition: Room Temperature

TRUSTED_SUSTAINABILITY

Specifications

Color Red
Content And Storage Store at room temperature and protect from light.
For Use With (Equipment) Fluorescence Microscope, Flow Cytometer
Quantity 1 mL
Detection Method Fluorescence
Product Line Vybrant
Shipping Condition Room Temperature
Label Type Fluorescent Dye
Product Type Liphophilic Tracer
Sub Cellular Localization Cell Membranes, Lipids
I'm labeling live cells with Vybrant DiI or DiD lipophilic cyanine dyes. DiI gives a nice even membrane labeling, but DiD is more "spotty". What can be done?

This is expected. DiD (which is far-red fluorescent) is never as uniform as DiI (which is orange fluorescent). If uniformity is desired, try increasing the label time and concentration, but it still isn't likely to be as uniform as DiI. CellMask Deep Red Plasma Membrane stain is much more uniform and is about the same wavelength as DiD. However, if you intend to do cell tracking over days, CellMask stain has not been tried for that application.

I want to perform a cell fusion assay, where one cell line is labeled with one color and the other cell line with another color, and combine with a nucleic acid stain. What do you recommend?

A typical method is to label one cell line with orange fluorescent DiI C18 and the other cell line with green fluorescent DiO C18. These orange and green lipophilic cyanine dyes will stain the membranes of cells. Cells that fuse will then have both dyes, yielding a yellow color (when images are overlaid or cells are imaged in a dual-bandpass filter). These live cells can then be labeled with Hoechst 33342 (a cell-permeant blue DNA stain comparable in wavelength to DAPI), but only as an endpoint just before imaging (since DNA stains can interrupt DNA function).

I need to look at live cell morphology deformation over the course of a few hours. What sort of membrane dye would be useful for this?

Lipophilic cyanine dyes, such as DiI (Cat. No. D282), DiO (Cat. No. D275), DiD (Cat. No. D7757) or DiR (Cat. No. D12731), are commonly used. The longer the alkyl chain on the dye, the better the retention in lipophilic environments.

For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.

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