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Get tips on using IMAGEN™ Respiratory Syncytial Virus Kit (RSV) using Direct Immunofluorescence Assay to perform Cell Culture Contamination Detection Kit Virus

Products Thermo Fisher Scientific IMAGEN™ Respiratory Syncytial Virus Kit (RSV) using Direct Immunofluorescence Assay

Get tips on using Dead Cell Apoptosis Kit with Annexin V FITC and PI to perform Apoptosis assay cell type - OECM-1

Products Thermo Fisher Scientific Dead Cell Apoptosis Kit with Annexin V FITC and PI

Get tips on using Mouse Monoclonal Antibody to Lamin A/C Cat# MCA-4C4 to perform Western blotting Lamin A/C

Products EnCor Biotechnology Inc. Mouse Monoclonal Antibody to Lamin A/C Cat# MCA-4C4

Get tips on using Mouse/Rat/Porcine/Canine TGF-beta 1 Quantikine ELISA Kit to perform ELISA Rat - TGF-beta 1

Products R&D Systems Mouse/Rat/Porcine/Canine TGF-beta 1 Quantikine ELISA Kit

Get tips on using Pierce™ Coomassie (Bradford) Protein Assay Kit to perform Protein quantification Mammalian cells - MDA-MB-231

Products Thermo Fisher Scientific Pierce™ Coomassie (Bradford) Protein Assay Kit

Get tips on using OxiSelect™ Comet Assay Kit (3-Well Slides) to perform DNA Damage Assay HeLa

Products Cell Biolabs OxiSelect™ Comet Assay Kit (3-Well Slides)

Gene silencing through the use of small interfering RNA (siRNA) has become a primary tool for identifying disease-causing genes. There are several aspects for preparing and delivering effective siRNA to knockdown a target gene. The length of siRNA should be 21–23nt long with G/C content 30–50%. If a validated siRNA sequence for your target gene is not available, use siRNA generated against the entire target gene ORF. Always work with two or three different siRNA constructs to get reliable results. If you are not sure how much siRNA to use for a given experiment, start with a transfection concentration of 10-50 nM and use siRNA-specific transfection reagent to ensure efficient siRNA delivery in a wide range of cells.

RNA siRNA / miRNA gene silencing Mouse Neuro 2a c-Jun

Gene silencing through the use of small interfering RNA (siRNA) has become a primary tool for identifying disease-causing genes. There are several aspects for preparing and delivering effective siRNA to knockdown a target gene. The length of siRNA should be 21–23nt long with G/C content 30–50%. If a validated siRNA sequence for your target gene is not available, use siRNA generated against the entire target gene ORF. Always work with two or three different siRNA constructs to get reliable results. If you are not sure how much siRNA to use for a given experiment, start with a transfection concentration of 10-50 nM and use siRNA-specific transfection reagent to ensure efficient siRNA delivery in a wide range of cells.

RNA siRNA / miRNA gene silencing Mouse B16-F10 COX-2

Get tips on using β-Galactosidase Enzyme Assay System with Reporter Lysis Buffer to perform Reporter gene assay β-galactosidase substrates - human MSCs (mesenchymal stem cells)

Products Promega β-Galactosidase Enzyme Assay System with Reporter Lysis Buffer

Get tips on using SurePrint G3 Mouse Exon 4x180K Microarray Kit (165,984 Exon probes) to perform Microarray Mice - Cochlea Expression array (labelled)

Products Agilent Technologies SurePrint G3 Mouse Exon 4x180K Microarray Kit (165,984 Exon probes)

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