Tetrodotoxin citrate

(HB1035)
Technical documents: SDS CoA Datasheet

Product overview

Name Tetrodotoxin citrate
Alternative names TTX|TTX citrate
Purity >99%
Special requirements

This is a Home Office notifiable schedule 5 toxin. As this product is a toxin, customers are required to complete a short end user declaration when ordering. Our customer care team will be happy to help you with this.

Customer comments

Great product! TTX citrate works great and is very effective for neuroscience study. I have used this product for many years. Other products are excellent as well Verified customer, Texas A&M University, USA

Works as it should for a reasonable price. The citrate version dissolves easily in water at 1mM and blocks action potentials quickly and reversibly at 0.5µM. Verified customer, Heidelberg University, Germany

Excellent, good value product. We have bought this product for many years and it has always performed as it should. It dissolves quickly and is highly effective at the doses suggested by the literature. We will continue to buy it from Hello Bio. Verified customer, UCL, UK

...worked perfectly as expected and blocked action potential firing at concentrations of 100 nM and above. I would recommend the use of Tetrodotoxin citrate from Hello Bio for use in electrophysiology recordings. Matt Udakis, University of Bath, UK

Description Potent, selective, use-dependent Na+ channel blocker. Citrate Salt.
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Images

Figure 1. TTX citrate mediated inhibition of action potential firing upon post synaptic current injection in cortical neuron

Tetrodotoxin is commonly used in electrophysiology to block excitability by inhibiting action potential firing within neurons. It is commonly applied at concentrations of 1 µM. Tetrodotoxin from Hello Bio works as expected and blocks action potential firing at concentrations of 100 nM For assay protocol, see #Protocol 1 in Application Notes below.

Figure 2. TTX citrate mediated inhibition of electrically evoked EPSP and action potential within cortical neuron

Tetrodotoxin is commonly used in electrophysiology to block excitability by inhibiting action potential firing within neurons. It is commonly applied at concentrations of 1µM. Tetrodotoxin from Hello Bio works as expected and blocks action potential firing at concentrations of 100 nM For assay protocol, see #Protocol 2 in Application Notes below.

Figure 3. Whole-cell voltage clamp recordings made from primary cultured rat cortical neurons.

Neurons are voltage clamped with a holding voltage of -70 mV. Spontaneous miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents (SEPSCs) are recorded. 100 nM was then bath applied in the perfusate, resulting in the rapid elimination of action potential spiking.

Figure 4. Whole-cell current clamp recordings using a K+-based filling solution

Whole-cell current clamp recordings were made from primary cultured rat cortical neurons using a K+-based filling solution. Neurons were injected with 600 pa current for 400 ms. 100 nM TTX was then bath applied in the perfusate, and the stimulus repeated. Example traces show the evoked action potentials eliminated following TTX perfusion.
Tetrodotoxin Citrate: Scientist Approved

Biological Data

Biological description

Potent, selective and reversible, voltage dependent Na+ channel blocker. Use dependent. Citrate Salt. Commonly used in electrophysiological preparations to block or reduce excitability.

Application notes

Tetrodotoxin is commonly used in electrophysiology to block excitability by inhibiting action potential firing within neurons. It is commonly applied at concentrations of 1 μM. Tetrodotoxin from Hello Bio works as expected and blocks action potential firing at concentrations of 100 nM and above (see Fig 1 and 2 above).

 

#Protocol 1: Effect of TTX citrate on action potentials in mouse cortical neurons

  • Whole cell voltage clamp recordings were obtained from layer V pyramidal neurons of the mouse prelimbic cortex brain slice.
  • Neurons were held at the resting membrane potential (~ -70 mV) and injected with a 500 pA 300 ms current step to induce action potential firing.
  • TTX was bath applied for 10 min first at 100 nM then 300 nM, 1 μM and 2 μM. After each drug application a current step was recorded to assess action potential blockade.

 

#Protocol 2: Effect of TTX citrate on EPSPs and action potential firing in mouse cortical neurons

  • Whole cell voltage clamp recordings were obtained from layer V pyramidal neurons of the mouse prelimbic cortex brain slice.
  • Neurons were held at the resting membrane potential (~ -70 mV) and EPSP were evoked by placing a stimulating electrode close to the recorded the neuron in layer II/III.
  • EPSPs and action potentials were evoked by single square (150 μs) pulse every 10 sec with an intensity that produced both an EPSP and action potential.
  • TTX was bath applied for 10 min first at 100 nM then 300 nM, 1 μM and 2 μM whist continually evoking and recording EPSP/A.Ps.

Solubility & Handling

Storage instructions -20°C (desiccate)
Solubility overview

Soluble in water (1 mg/ml). The vial contains 1 mg of TTX and an additional 5 mg of citrate buffer to aid with solubility. For calculations relating to TTX concentration, refer to the molecular weight 319.27 listed on the vial.

Important This product is for RESEARCH USE ONLY and is not intended for therapeutic or diagnostic use. Not for human or veterinary use.

Calculators

Molarity

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Dilution

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Chemical Data

Purity >99%
Chemical name Octahydro-12-(hydroxymethyl)-2-imin o-5,9:7,10a-dimethano-10aH-[1,3]dioxocino[6,5-d]py rimidine-4,7,10,11,12-pentol citrate
Molecular Weight 319.27
Chemical structure Tetrodotoxin citrate (TTX citrate) [18660-81-6] Chemical Structure
Molecular Formula C11H17N3O8
CAS Number 18660-81-6
PubChem identifier 54592378
SMILES C(C(=O)O)C(CC(=O)O)(C(=O)O)O.C([C@@]1([C@@H]2[C@@H]3[C@H](N=C(N[C@]34[C@@H]([C@H]1O[C@]([C@H]4O)(O2)O)O)N)O)O)O
Source Extracted from fugu
InChi InChI=1S/C11H17N3O8.C6H8O7/c12-8-13-6(17)2-4-9(19,1-15)5-3(16)10(2,14-8)7(18)11(20,21-4)22-5;7-3(8)1-6(13,5(11)12)2-4(9)10/h2-7,15-20H,1H2,(H3,12,13,14);13H,1-2H2,(H,7,8)(H,9,10)(H,11,12)/t2-,3-,4+,5-,6-,7+,9+,10+,11+;/m1./s1
InChiKey YUJWMDOXROTQCW-WNGAXIQVSA-N
Appearance White or colourless solid

References for Tetrodotoxin citrate

References are publications that support the biological activity of the product
  • Tetrodotoxin: chemistry, toxicity, source, distribution and detection.

    Bane V et al (2014) Toxins (Basel) 6(2) : 693-755.
  • Antagonistic effects of tetrodotoxin on aconitine-induced cardiac toxicity.

    Ono T et al (2013) J Nippon Med Sch 80(5) : 350-61.
  • Tetrodotoxin for moderate to severe cancer pain: a randomized, double blind, parallel design multicenter study.

    Hagen NA et al (2008) J Pain Symptom Manage 35(4) : 420-9.
  • The protective action of tetrodotoxin and (+/-)-kavain on anaerobic glycolysis, ATP content and intracellular Na+ and Ca2+ of anoxic brain vesicles.

    Gleitz J et al (1996) Neuropharmacology 35(12) : 1743-52.

4 Item(s)

Publications
These publications cite the use of Tetrodotoxin citrate purchased from Hello Bio:
  • Plasticity in Prefrontal Cortex Induced by Coordinated Synaptic Transmission Arising from Reuniens/Rhomboid Nuclei and Hippocampus

    Banks PJ et al (2021) Cereb Cortex Commun 2(2) : tgab029
    PubMedID: 34296174
  • Reciprocal regulation of spontaneous synaptic vesicle fusion by Fragile X mental retardation protein and group I metabotropic glutamate receptors

    Subrahmanyam R et al (2021) J Neurochem 158(5) : 1094-1109
    PubMedID: 34327719
  • Cholinergic deficits selectively boost cortical intratelencephalic control of the striatum in Huntington's disease

    Surmeier et al et al (2021) Research Square https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-1008365/v1
  • Pain modulates dopamine neurons via a spinal-parabrachial-mesencephalic circuit

    Yang H et al (2021) Nat Neurosci 24(10) : 1402-1413
    PubMedID: 34373644
  • Excitotoxicity and NMDA receptor-mediated acquired neuroprotection in human iPSC-derived brain organoids

    Bauersachs et al (2021) 10.11588/heidok.00030808

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