Antagonists & inhibitors
An antagonist is a drug or chemical that reduces the effect of an agonist. Competitive antagonists bind to the same site on a receptor as the agonist but do not activate it - thereby blocking the action of the agonist. Non-competitive antagonists block the action of the agonist by binding to a different site on the receptor (an allosteric or non-agonist site). A reversible antagonist binds non-covalently and can be washed out. An irreversible antagonist binds covalently and cannot be displaced by either competing ligands or washing. Inhibitors are drugs that can bind to a protein, such as an enzyme and decrease its activity. Researchers can save up to 50% on competitive antagonists, non-competitive antagonists, reversible and irreversible antagonists, and inhibitors from Hello Bio - they are up to half the price of other suppliers.
- Description:
Protease Inhibitor Cocktail (EDTA free) solution for plant cell and tissue extract use
Puromycin dihydrochloride (HB4041)
Description:Protein synthesis inhibitor. Cell culture selection antibiotic.
Purity:>98%
Rapamycin (HB2779)
Description:mTOR inhibitor and potent immunosuppressant. Also used in inducible gene editing methods (e.g. CRISPR/Cas9) and promotes hPSC differentiation.
Purity:>98%
X-Gal (HB4128)
Description:Detects presence and activity of β -galactosidase. Widely used in cloning applications.
Purity:>99%