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Overview
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Calcimycin (syn. A23187) is a potent Ca2+ ionophore and carboxylic acid antibiotic isolated from the soil bacterium Streptomyces chartreusis (NRRL 3882) in 1974. It was isolated from the bacterial culture as a mixed calcium-magnesium salt, which can be converted to the free acid form.
Calcimycin is a spiroketal substituted by pyrollic and benzoxazolyl groups which allow its high affinity and selectivity for calcium. It also has high affinity for Mg2+ and Mn2+. It is used as a research tool for calcium regulation. A mobile ion-carrier, it forms complexes with divalent cations, thus equilibrating the inter- and intracellular concentrations. It allows Mn2+ into the cell to quench intracellular dye fluorescence and can be used in flow cytometry. It can be used with visible light-excitable indicators including calcium green, magnesium green and calcium orange and others. Calcimycin has activity against bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and Mycobacteria. Calcimycin can be used as a research tool to study the role of divalent cations in biological systems, such as increasing the levels of intracellular Ca2+ in intact cells. It can also be used for in-situ calibrations of fluorescent Ca2+ indicators.
Calcimycin is soluble in ethanol, methanol, DMSO and DMF. It is slightly soluble in water. Dissolve in in DMSO or ethanol prior to preparing low concentrations of aqueous solutions.Please contact us at for specific academic pricing.
Background
Calcimycin is a divalent cation ionophore, allowing ions to cross cell membranes. It is highly selective for Ca2+. It can act as an uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation. It is an inhibitor of mitochondrial ATPase activity. In mycobacteria, Calcimycin induces P2RX7-dependent, calcium-regulated autophagy.
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- Properties
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Overview