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CHO-K1/Rat M5 Stable Cell

Item
Cat#
Price

Stable Cell Line

SNB-G-0017C

$19,800

Compound Testing Services

CT-001

$1,850 per 384w plate

(Up To 16 cpds Dose)


Product Description


The M5 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (CHRM5) is a member of the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChRs) family and belongs to the class of G protein-coupled receptors. It is primarily distributed in the central nervous system (such as midbrain dopaminergic neurons and the striatum) as well as in peripheral tissues (e.g., pancreatic β-cells). By modulating acetylcholine signaling, it contributes to the regulation of reward pathways, metabolic homeostasis, and drug addiction behaviors.

 

Screeningbio’s CHO-K1/Rat M5 cell line overexpress CHRM5 receptor and is designed to detect increases in intracellular IP-1 levels in response to agonist stimulation of the receptor. Cisbio HTRF IP-1 kit can be used to detect the signal.

Product Specifications

Target Type

GPCR

Species

Rat

HGNC Symbol

CHRM5

Accession Number

NM_017362

Parental Line

CHO-K1

Lot#

See Vial

Storage

Liquid Nitrogen


Data


CHO-K1/Rat M5 Agonist Assay. CHO-K1/Rat M5 cells were treated with the reference agonist Acetylcholine.The assay was run based on Revvity IP-one HTRF protocol. Non-linear regression was used to plot activity changes vs. [Compound, M], and EC50 /IC50 values were determined, using GraphPad Prism software.
CHO-K1/Rat M5 Agonist Assay. CHO-K1/Rat M5 cells were treated with the reference agonist Acetylcholine.The assay was run based on Revvity IP-one HTRF protocol. Non-linear regression was used to plot activity changes vs. [Compound, M], and EC50 /IC50 values were determined, using GraphPad Prism software.


Target Background


The M5 muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (CHRM5) is a member of the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChRs) family and belongs to the class of G protein-coupled receptors.


It is primarily distributed in the central nervous system (such as midbrain dopaminergic neurons and the striatum) as well as in peripheral tissues (e.g., pancreatic β-cells). By modulating acetylcholine signaling, it contributes to the regulation of reward pathways, metabolic homeostasis, and drug addiction behaviors.


 



Product Documentation



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