DNA transfection Mammalian cells Immortalized cell lines

- Found 7531 results

Get tips on using CelLytic™ MT Cell Lysis Reagent to perform Protein isolation Mammalian cells - HUVEC

Products Sigma-Aldrich CelLytic™ MT Cell Lysis Reagent

Get tips on using CelLytic™ MT Cell Lysis Reagent to perform Protein isolation Mammalian cells - HeLa

Products Sigma-Aldrich CelLytic™ MT Cell Lysis Reagent

Protein expression refers to the techniques in which a protein of interest is synthesized, modified or regulated in cells. The blueprints for proteins are stored in DNA which is then transcribed to produce messenger RNA (mRNA). mRNA is then translated into protein. In prokaryotes, this process of mRNA translation occurs simultaneously with mRNA transcription. In eukaryotes, these two processes occur at separate times and in separate cellular regions (transcription in nucleus and translation in cytoplasm). Recombinant protein expression utilizes cellular machinery to generate proteins, instead of chemical synthesis of proteins as it is very complex. Proteins produced from such DNA templates are called recombinant proteins and DNA templates are simple to construct. Recombinant protein expression involves transfecting cells with a DNA vector that contains the template. The cultured cells can then transcribe and translate the desired protein. The cells can be lysed to extract the expressed protein for subsequent purification. Both prokaryotic and eukaryotic protein expression systems are widely used. The selection of the system depends on the type of protein, the requirements for functional activity and the desired yield. These expression systems include mammalian, insect, yeast, bacterial, algal and cell-free. Each of these has pros and cons. Mammalian expression systems can be used for transient or stable expression, with ultra high-yield protein expression. However, high yields are only possible in suspension cultures and more demanding culture conditions. Insect cultures are the same as mammalian, except that they can be used as both static and suspension cultures. These cultures also have demanding culture conditions and may also be time consuming. Yeast cultures can produce eukaryotic proteins and are scalable, with minimum culture requirements. Yeast cultures may require growth culture optimization. Bacterial cultures are simple, scalable and low cost, but these may require protein specific optimization and are not suitable for all mammalian proteins. Algal cultures are optimized for robust selection and expression, but these are less developed than other host platforms. Cell-free systems are open, free of any unnatural compounds, fast and simple. This system is however, not optimal for scaling up.

Proteins Protein Expression Prokaryotic cells E. coli 56‐kDa O. tsutsugamushi strain Karp protein

Protein expression refers to the techniques in which a protein of interest is synthesized, modified or regulated in cells. The blueprints for proteins are stored in DNA which is then transcribed to produce messenger RNA (mRNA). mRNA is then translated into protein. In prokaryotes, this process of mRNA translation occurs simultaneously with mRNA transcription. In eukaryotes, these two processes occur at separate times and in separate cellular regions (transcription in nucleus and translation in the cytoplasm). Recombinant protein expression utilizes cellular machinery to generate proteins, instead of chemical synthesis of proteins as it is very complex. Proteins produced from such DNA templates are called recombinant proteins and DNA templates are simple to construct. Recombinant protein expression involves transfecting cells with a DNA vector that contains the template. The cultured cells can then transcribe and translate the desired protein. The cells can be lysed to extract the expressed protein for subsequent purification. Both prokaryotic and eukaryotic protein expression systems are widely used. The selection of the system depends on the type of protein, the requirements for functional activity and the desired yield. These expression systems include mammalian, insect, yeast, bacterial, algal and cell-free. Each of these has pros and cons. Mammalian expression systems can be used for transient or stable expression, with ultra high-yield protein expression. However, high yields are only possible in suspension cultures and more demanding culture conditions. Insect cultures are the same as mammalian, except that they can be used as both static and suspension cultures. These cultures also have demanding culture conditions and may also be time-consuming. Yeast cultures can produce eukaryotic proteins and are scalable, with minimum culture requirements. Yeast cultures may require growth culture optimization. Bacterial cultures are simple, scalable and low cost, but these may require protein-specific optimization and are not suitable for all mammalian proteins. Algal cultures are optimized for robust selection and expression, but these are less developed than other host platforms. Cell-free systems are open, free of any unnatural compounds, fast and simple. This system is, however, not optimal for scaling up.

Proteins Protein Expression Prokaryotic cells E. coli rabbit voltage-dependent calcium channel β2a subunit

The estimation of DNA methylation level heavily depends on the complete conversion of non-methylated DNA cytosines. It is crucial to ensure complete conversion of non-methylated cytosines in DNA. Therefore, it is important to incorporate controls for bisulfite reactions, as well as to pay attention to the appearance of cytosines in non-CpG sites after sequencing, which is an indicator of incomplete conversion.

DNA DNA methylation profiling Gene specific profiling TCP-1, BCPAP & nthy-ori 3-1 (thyroid tumor cells) METTL7A

Get tips on using pcDNA™3.1 (+) Mammalian Expression Vector to perform Protein expression and purification Mammalian cells - CHO-K1 sRAGE

Products Thermo Fisher Scientific pcDNA™3.1 (+) Mammalian Expression Vector

Get tips on using Pierce™ Cell Surface Protein Isolation Kit to perform Protein isolation Mammalian cells - Human aortic endothelial cells

Products Thermo Fisher Scientific Pierce™ Cell Surface Protein Isolation Kit

Get tips on using GenomONE™-Neo HVJ-E Membrane Fusion Transfection Kit to perform siRNA / miRNA gene silencing Human - U937 MK2 (MAPK Kinase 2) Viral vectors

Products Cosmo Bio GenomONE™-Neo HVJ-E Membrane Fusion Transfection Kit

Get tips on using GenomONE™-Neo HVJ-E Membrane Fusion Transfection Kit to perform siRNA / miRNA gene silencing Human - Jurkat MK2 (MAPK Kinase 2) Viral vectors

Products Cosmo Bio GenomONE™-Neo HVJ-E Membrane Fusion Transfection Kit

Get tips on using Live and Dead Cell Assay (Abcam) to perform Live / Dead assay mammalian cells - rabbit bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells

Products Abcam Live and Dead Cell Assay (Abcam)

Outsource your experiment

Fill out your contact details and receive price quotes in your Inbox

  Outsource experiment
Become shareholder Discussions About us Contact Privacy Terms