Resazurin (7-Hydroxy-3 H-phenoxazin-3-one 10-oxide) is a phenoxazine dye that is weakly Fluorescence, nontoxic, cell-permeable, and redox‐sensitive. Resazurin has a blue to purple color above pH 6.5 and an orange color below pH 3.8. It is used in Microbiology, cellular, and Enzyme assays because it can be irreversibly Redox to the pink-colored and highly fluorescent resorufin (7-Hydroxy-3 H-phenoxazin-3-one). At circum-neutral pH, resorufin can be detected by visual observation of its pink color or by fluorimetry, with an excitation maximum at 530-570 nm and an emission maximum at 580-590 nm.Chen, J. L., Steele, T. W., & Stuckey, D. C. (2015). Modeling and application of a rapid fluorescence-based assay for biotoxicity in anaerobic digestion. Environmental science & technology, 49(22), 13463-13471.http://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.5b03050
When a solution containing resorufin is submitted to reducing conditions (Eh < -110 mV), almost all resorufin is reversibly reduced to the translucid non-fluorescent dihydroresorufin (also known as hydroresorufin) and the solution becomes translucid (the redox potential of the resorufin/dihydroresorufin pair is -51 mV vs. standard hydrogen electrode at pH 7.0). When the Eh of this same solution is increased, dihydroresorufin is oxidized back to resorufin, and this reversible reaction can be used to monitor if the redox potential of a Growth medium remains at a sufficiently low level for anaerobic organisms.
Resazurin solution has one of the highest values known of Kreft's dichromaticity index. This means that it has a large change in perceived color hue when the thickness or concentration of observed sample increases or decreases.
Usually, resazurin is available commercially as the sodium salt.
Resazurin based assays show excellent correlation to reference viability assays such as formazan-based assays (MTT assay/XTT) and tritiated thymidine based techniques. UptiBlue viable cell assay technical manual The low toxicity makes it suitable for longer studies, and it has been applied for animal cells, bacteria, and fungi for cell culture assays such as cell counting, cell survival, and cell proliferation. In antimicrobial assays, resazurin is commonly utilized to assess the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) or minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC) of antimicrobial agents.
To take the place of a standard live/dead assay, resazurin also be multiplexed with chemiluminescent assays, such as cytokine assays, caspase assays to measure apoptosis, or reporter assays to measure a gene or a protein expression.
The irreversible reaction of resazurin to resorufin is proportional to aerobic respiration.
Usually, in the presence of NADPH dehydrogenase or NADH dehydrogenase as the enzyme, NADPH or NADH is the reductant that converts resazurin to resorufin. Hence the resazurin/diaphorase/NADPH system can be used to detect NADH, NADPH, or diaphorase level, and any biochemical or enzyme activity that is involved in a biochemical reaction generating NADH or NADPH.
Resazurin can be used to assay Glutamic acid, achieving a sensitivity of 2.0 pmol per well in a 96 well plate.
Resazurin can also be used to measure the aerobic biodegradation of organic matter found in effluents.
Resazurin is used to measure the amount of aerobic respiration in streams. Since most aerobic respiration occurs in the stream bed, the conversion of resazurin to resorufin is also a measure of the amount of exchange between the water column and the stream bed.
7-ethoxyresorufin, a compound used as the substrate in the measurement of cytochrome P450 (CYP1A1) induction using the ethoxyresorufin-O-deethylase (EROD) assay system in cell culture and environmental samples, produced in response to exposure to aryl hydrocarbons. The compound is catalysed by the enzyme to produce the same fluorescent product, resorufin.
1,3-dichloro-7-hydroxy-9,9-dimethylacridin-2(9 H)-one (DDAO dye), a fluorescent dye used for oligonucleotide labeling.
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