L-Ascorbic acid (sodium salt) (Standard)
CAT:
804-HY-B0166AR-03
Size:
50 mg
Price:
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- Availability: 24/48H Stock Items & 2 to 6 Weeks non Stock Items.
- Dry Ice Shipment: No

L-Ascorbic acid (sodium salt) (Standard)
- CAS Number: 134-03-2
- UNSPSC Description: L-Ascorbic acid (sodium salt) (Standard) is the analytical standard of L-Ascorbic acid (sodium salt). This product is intended for research and analytical applications. L-Ascorbic acid sodium salt (Sodium ascorbate), an electron donor, is an endogenous antioxidant agent. L-Ascorbic acid sodium salt selectively inhibits Cav3.2 channels with an IC50 of 6.5 μM. L-Ascorbic acid sodium salt is also a collagen deposition enhancer and an elastogenesis inhibitor[1][2][3].
- Target Antigen: Apoptosis; Calcium Channel; Endogenous Metabolite; Reactive Oxygen Species
- Type: Reference Standards
- Related Pathways: Apoptosis;Immunology/Inflammation;Membrane Transporter/Ion Channel;Metabolic Enzyme/Protease;Neuronal Signaling;NF-κB
- Field of Research: Cancer
- Assay Protocol: https://www.medchemexpress.com/l-ascorbic-acid-sodium-salt-standard.html
- Smiles: O[C@@H](CO)[C@]1([H])C(O[Na])=C(O)C(O1)=O
- Molecular Weight: 198.11
- References & Citations: [1]Hinek A, et al. Sodium L-ascorbate enhances elastic fibers deposition by fibroblasts from normal and pathologic human skin. J Dermatol Sci. 2014 Sep;75(3):173-82.|[2]Yang X, et al. Mouse melanoma cell line B16F10-derived conditioned medium inhibits sodium L-ascorbate-induced B16F10 cell apoptosis. Nan Fang Yi Ke Da Xue Xue Bao. 2012 Feb;32(2):146-50.|[3]Morimura K, et al. Lack of urinary bladder carcinogenicity of sodium L-ascorbate in human c-Ha-ras proto-oncogene transgenic rats. Toxicol Pathol. 2005;33(7):764-7.|[4]Takagi H, et al. Limited tumor-initiating activity of phenylethyl isothiocyanate by promotion with sodium L-ascorbate in a rat two-stage urinary bladder carcinogenesis model. Cancer Lett. 2005 Mar 10;219(2):147-53.|[5]Aleksander Hinek, et al. Sodium L-ascorbate enhances elastic fibers deposition by fibroblasts from normal and pathologic human skin. J Dermatol Sci. 2014 Sep;75(3):173-82.|[6]Michael T Nelson, et al. Molecular mechanisms of subtype-specific inhibition of neuronal T-type calcium channels by ascorbate. J Neurosci. 2007 Nov 14;27(46):12577-83.
- Shipping Conditions: Room temperature