System Biosciences
pGreenFire 2.0-mCMV negative control virus (pGF2-mCMV-rFluc-T2A-GFP-mPGK-Puro)
- SKU:
- TR411VA-P
- Availability:
- Usually Shipped in 5 Working Days
- Size:
- >2 x 10^6 IFUs
- Shipping Temperature:
- Dry Ice
Description
pGreenFire 2.0-mCMV negative control virus (pGF2-mCMV-rFluc-T2A-GFP-mPGK-Puro). Cat# TR411VA-P. Supplier: SBI System Biosciences
With the pGreenFire 2.0 mCMV vector you can add-in your own transcriptional response elements or use as-is as a negative control for any pGreenFire 2.0 project.
Products
Overview
With the pGreenFire 2.0 mCMV Cloning & Negative Control Lentivector & Virus (pGF2-mCMV-rFluc-T2A-GFP-mPGK-Puro), you can take advantage of our robust pGreenFire 2.0 lentivector technology to create your own transcriptional response element (TRE) reporter or use pGreenFire 2.0 mCMV as-is as a negative control.
With the pGreenFire 2.0 mCMV Cloning & Negative Control Lentivector, XhoI and NheI sites are placed upstream of a minimal CMV promoter (mCMV) so you can clone in your own TREs. Upon activation, the TREs and mCMV promoter together drive co-expression of red firefly luciferase and GFP so you can quantitatively measure transcriptional activity using both fluorescence and luciferase activity.
Alternatively, you can use the vector as-is as a negative control for any project using pGreenFire 2.0 lentivectors (see data below).
What makes our next-gen pGreenFire 2.0 vectors even better than other TRE reporter vectors is the smart design, which adds in a constitutive selection cassette for stable cell line generation while minimizing interference with the upstream TRE. By using a weak/moderate mPGK promoter to drive the antibiotic selection marker (puromycin resistance) and carefully arranging the conditional reporter genes, the selection marker is reliably expressed without compromising conditional expression of rFLuc and GFP.
As with all of our pGreenFire 2.0 lentivectors, the GreenFire cassette now consists of red firefly luciferase (rFLuc), a T2A co-expression element, and GFP. The switch to rFLuc opens up the possibility of performing a dual-spectral luciferase assay and also delivers greater sensitivity for in vivo applications than conventional luciferase.