RNA sequencing Human

- Found 6913 results

miRNA is the inherent gene silencing machinery which can have more than one mRNA target, whereas siRNA can be designed to target a particular mRNA target. By design, both siRNA and miRNA are 20-25 nucleotides in length. The target sequence for siRNAs is usually located within the open reading frame, between 50 and 100 nucleotides downstream of the start codon. There are two ways in which cells can be transfected with desired RNAi: 1. Direct transfection (with calcium phosphate co-precipitation or cationic lipid mediated transfection using lipofectamine or oligofectamine), and 2. Making RNAi lentiviral constructs (followed by transformation and transduction). Lentiviral constructs are time consuming, but provide a more permanent expression of RNAi in the cells, and consistent gene silencing. Direct transfection of oligonucleotides provides temporary genetic suppression. Traditional methods like calcium phosphate co-precipitation have challenges like low efficiency, poor reproducibility and cell toxicity. Whereas, cationic lipid-based transfection reagents are able to overcome these challenges, along with applicability to a large variety of eukaryotic cell lines. When using oligos, the ideal concentration lies between 10-50nM for effective transfection.

RNA siRNA / miRNA gene silencing Human MDA-MB-231 ARG/ABL2

miRNA is the inherent gene silencing machinery which can have more than one mRNA target, whereas siRNA can be designed to target a particular mRNA target. By design, both siRNA and miRNA are 20-25 nucleotides in length. The target sequence for siRNAs is usually located within the open reading frame, between 50 and 100 nucleotides downstream of the start codon. There are two ways in which cells can be transfected with desired RNAi: 1. Direct transfection (with calcium phosphate co-precipitation or cationic lipid mediated transfection using lipofectamine or oligofectamine), and 2. Making RNAi lentiviral constructs (followed by transformation and transduction). Lentiviral constructs are time consuming, but provide a more permanent expression of RNAi in the cells, and consistent gene silencing. Direct transfection of oligonucleotides provides temporary genetic suppression. Traditional methods like calcium phosphate co-precipitation have challenges like low efficiency, poor reproducibility and cell toxicity. Whereas, cationic lipid-based transfection reagents are able to overcome these challenges, along with applicability to a large variety of eukaryotic cell lines. When using oligos, the ideal concentration lies between 10-50nM for effective transfection.

RNA siRNA / miRNA gene silencing Human HT-29 B7-H6/NCR3LG1

Get tips on using MammoCult™ Human Medium Kit to perform 3D Cell Culture Media Human breast cancer MDA-MB-231 cells-Mammospheres

Products STEMCELL technologies MammoCult™ Human Medium Kit

Get tips on using Silencer® FANCD2 siRNA (human) to perform siRNA / miRNA gene silencing Human - 501 Mel and SK Mel 28 FANCD2

Products Dharmacon (GE Life Sciences) Silencer® FANCD2 siRNA (human)

Get tips on using Absolutely RNA FFPE Kit to perform RNA isolation / purification Tissue - rat kidney tissue

Products Agilent Technologies Absolutely RNA FFPE Kit

Get tips on using RNeasy PowerSoil Total RNA Kit (25) to perform RNA isolation / purification Soil

Products Qiagen RNeasy PowerSoil Total RNA Kit (25)

Protein isolation is a technique that involves isolation and/ or purification of protein from cells or tissues via chromatography or electrophoresis. The major challenges in protein isolation include: 1. The concentration of proteins in cells is variable and tends to be small for some intracellular proteins. Unlike nucleic acids, proteins cannot be amplified. 2. Proteins are more unstable than nucleic acids. They are easily denatured under suboptimal temperature, pH or salt concentrations. 3. Finally, no generalized technique/protocol can be applied for protein isolation. Proteins may have different electrostatic (number of positively or negatively charged amino acids) or hydrophobic properties. Therefore, protein purification requires multiple steps depending on their charge (a negatively charged resin/column for positively charged proteins and vice-versa), dissolution (using detergents) and unlike in the case of DNA and RNA, instead of using salts, proteins should be isolated by isoelectric precipitation.

Proteins Protein isolation Tissue Human placental tissue

Get tips on using p62 (human) polyclonal antibody to perform Immunohistochemistry Mouse - p62

Products Enzo Life Sciences p62 (human) polyclonal antibody

Get tips on using Human MMP-1 Antibody to perform Western blotting MMP1

Products R&D Systems Human MMP-1 Antibody

Get tips on using ON-TARGETplus Human PPRC1 siRNA to perform siRNA / miRNA gene silencing Human - MCF-7 PRC (PGC-1α–related coactivator)/PPRC1

Products Horizon Discovery Ltd. ON-TARGETplus Human PPRC1 siRNA

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