Quercetin 50 mg/ml
research-grade
solution
in a 20 ml glass bottle. Quercetin is a plant-derived flavonoid polyphenol studied in experimental models of oxidative stress, inflammation, cellular signaling and senescence biology.
Research Use Only:
All products are intended exclusively for laboratory and scientific research. Not for human or veterinary use.
Purity
High-purity research grade
Content
50 mg Quercetin per 1 ml; 20 ml per bottle (total 1,000 mg per bottle)
Components / Contents
Quercetin as the active research compound in a clear research solution (carrier not specified).
Packaging
20 ml glass bottle with sterile closure
Storage
2–8 °C, protect from light
Molecular formula
C₁₅H₁₀O₇
Molecular weight
~302.24 g·mol⁻¹
IUPAC name
2-(3,4-dihydroxyphenyl)-3,5,7-trihydroxy-4H-chromen-4-one
Research Overview
Quercetin is a naturally occurring flavonoid polyphenol widely distributed in fruits, vegetables and plant tissues. In laboratory research it is used as a model antioxidant and signaling modulator, enabling studies on redox biology, inflammatory pathways, kinase activity and cellular stress responses across diverse in vitro and in vivo systems.
Primary Research Areas
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Antioxidant and redox biology:
used to investigate free radical scavenging, modulation of oxidative stress markers and protection of biomolecules in controlled experimental models.
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Inflammatory signaling pathways:
applied in studies examining NF-κB, MAPK and other pro-inflammatory signaling cascades, as well as cytokine and chemokine regulation in cellular systems.
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Senescence and senolytic research:
explored in models evaluating senescent cell burden, apoptosis induction and combinations with other senolytic agents in aging-related research.
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Cardiometabolic and vascular models:
investigated in experimental setups addressing endothelial function, vascular tone, lipid handling and cardiometabolic stress responses.
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Antiviral and immune modulation:
used in vitro to study interactions with viral replication, host cell entry pathways and broader immune-modulatory mechanisms.