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16751-100A conjugate of biotin and lysine used for derivatization or conjugation to proteins and other molecules with a medium-chain length spacer also used as an anterograde, retrograde, or intracellular neuroanatomical tracer that is fixable with
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16751-25A conjugate of biotin and lysine used for derivatization or conjugation to proteins and other molecules with a medium-chain length spacer also used as an anterograde, retrograde, or intracellular neuroanatomical tracer that is fixable with
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16751-50A conjugate of biotin and lysine used for derivatization or conjugation to proteins and other molecules with a medium-chain length spacer also used as an anterograde, retrograde, or intracellular neuroanatomical tracer that is fixable with
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18418-1A biotinyl derivative used to label surface functional groups, antibodies, lectins, sugars, nucleic acids, or molecules with free carboxylic or keto groups probe for determining protein carbonylation.
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18418-100A biotinyl derivative used to label surface functional groups, antibodies, lectins, sugars, nucleic acids, or molecules with free carboxylic or keto groups probe for determining protein carbonylation.
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18418-250A biotinyl derivative used to label surface functional groups, antibodies, lectins, sugars, nucleic acids, or molecules with free carboxylic or keto groups probe for determining protein carbonylation.
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18418-500A biotinyl derivative used to label surface functional groups, antibodies, lectins, sugars, nucleic acids, or molecules with free carboxylic or keto groups probe for determining protein carbonylation.
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13040-1A form of biotin with a terminal azide group is used to add biotin to other molecules that bear either an alkyne group, through click chemistry, or a phosphine group, using Staudinger ligation.
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13040-10A form of biotin with a terminal azide group is used to add biotin to other molecules that bear either an alkyne group, through click chemistry, or a phosphine group, using Staudinger ligation.
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13040-25A form of biotin with a terminal azide group is used to add biotin to other molecules that bear either an alkyne group, through click chemistry, or a phosphine group, using Staudinger ligation.
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13040-5A form of biotin with a terminal azide group is used to add biotin to other molecules that bear either an alkyne group, through click chemistry, or a phosphine group, using Staudinger ligation.
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16459-10A sulfhydryl-reactive biotinylation reagent that forms a reversible disulfide linkage, used to label protein cysteines and other substrates that contain sulfhydryl groups easily linked with target substrates at pH 6.5 to 7.