Antimicrobial peptides
Antimicrobial peptides (also known as AMPs or host defense peptides), are short, naturally occurring peptides found in multicellular organisms, and produced as a first line of defense. They can kill bacteria, yeasts, fungi, viruses and cancer cells, directly or indirectly by modulating the host defense systems. Researchers can save up to 50% on antimicrobial peptides from Hello Bio – they are up to half the price of other suppliers.
6-Thioguanine (HB1379)
Description:Competitive hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase substrate
Purity:>99%
Z-Leu-Arg-Gly-Gly-AMC (HB4131)
Description:Fluorogenic tetrapeptide substrate for Ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase and isopeptidase
Purity:>95%
Z-Leu-Leu-Glu-AMC (HB4132)
Description:Fluorogenic tri-peptide substrate. Useful for measuring trypsin-like 20S proteasome peptidase activity.
Purity:>95%
Z-Leu-Leu-Leu-AMC (HB4133)
Description:Fluorogenic tri-peptide substrate. Useful for measuring trypsin-like 20S proteasome peptidase activity.
Purity:>95%