RNA isolation / purification Tissue Human

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Get tips on using Quant-iT™ RiboGreen™ RNA Assay Kit to perform RNA quantification Fuorimetric - human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs)

Products Thermo Fisher Scientific Quant-iT™ RiboGreen™ RNA Assay Kit

Get tips on using RediPlate™ 96 RiboGreen™ RNA Quantitation Kit to perform RNA quantification Fuorimetric - human colorectal adenocarcinoma cells (CL-187)

Products Thermo Fisher Scientific RediPlate™ 96 RiboGreen™ RNA Quantitation Kit

Get tips on using NEBNext® Ultra™ RNA Library Prep Kit for Illumina® to perform RNA sequencing Human - SH-SY5Y

Products New England BioLabs NEBNext® Ultra™ RNA Library Prep Kit for Illumina®

Get tips on using EZ DNA Methylation kit to perform DNA methylation profiling Gene specific profiling - Human ovarian tissue MGMT

Products Zymo Research EZ DNA Methylation kit

Get tips on using β-Galactosidase Staining Kit to perform Reporter gene assay β-galactosidase substrates - human knee bone tissue

Products Cell Biolabs β-Galactosidase Staining Kit

Get tips on using EasySep™ Human Cord Blood CD34 Positive Selection Kit II to perform Cell Isolation CD34+ cells

Products STEMCELL technologies EasySep™ Human Cord Blood CD34 Positive Selection Kit II

Get tips on using Live-Dead cell staining kit (Enzo) to perform Live / Dead assay mammalian cells - human fibroblast tissue

Products Enzo Life Sciences Live-Dead cell staining kit (Enzo)

Stem cells have the unique ability to self-renew or differentiate themselves into various cell types in response to appropriate signals. These cells are especially important for tissue repair, regeneration, replacement, or in the case of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) to differentiate into various myeloid populations. Appropriate signals refer to the growth factor supplements or cytokines that mediate differentiation of various stem cells into the required differentiated form. For instance, HSCs can be differentiated into dendritic cells (with IL-4 and GM-CSF), macrophages (with m-CSF) and MDSCs (with IL-6 and GM-CSF). Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) and induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) can be first cultured in neural differentiation media (GSK3𝛃-i, TGF𝛃-i, AMPK-i, hLIF) to form neural rosettes, which can be differentiated into neural or glial progenitors (finally differentiated into oligodendrocytes). Neural progenitors can be finally differentiated into glutaminergic (dibytyryl cAMP, ascorbic acid) and dopaminergic (SHH, FGF-8, BDNF, GDNF, TGF-𝛃3) neurons. Thus, it is important to first identify the self-renewing cell line: its source and its final differentiation state, followed by the supplements and cytokines required for the differentiation, and final use. Timelines are another thing that is considered. For instance, it takes 7-10 days to form neural rosettes from iPSCs and 3 days to differentiate neural progenitors to neurons. Finally, the stability for stem cell culture media varies. It is advised to make fresh media every time when differentiating HSCs to myeloid populations, whereas neural differentiation media may remain stable for two weeks when stored in dark between 2-8C.

Cell culture media Stem cell Differentiation media Differentiation of Human iPSC into Human Neuroepithelial cells

Get tips on using NEBNext® Ultra™ RNA Library Prep Kit for Illumina® to perform RNA sequencing Human - MDA-MB-231

Products New England BioLabs NEBNext® Ultra™ RNA Library Prep Kit for Illumina®

Plasmid isolation is an important technique in molecular biology or any kind of genetic editing. It involves amplifying plasmids overnight by transforming them into competent bacterial cells. The desired colonies of these bacteria can then be grown in shaker cultures, at appropriate shaking speed, oxygen availability and temperature. These liquid cultures can then be ultracentrifuged to pellet the bacteria, which are then used for plasmid isolation. The bacteria are first resuspended in a buffer, then lysed, neutralized, purified in a column, eluted, precipitated with ethanol and then resuspended. During plasmid isolation, it is important to lyse cells quickly because lysing bacteria for too long may lead to irreversible denaturing of the plasmid. Usually, alkaline lysis is used for isolation because it is a mild treatment. It isolates plasmid DNA and other cell components such as proteins by breaking cells apart with an alkaline solution. Precipitation removes the proteins, and the plasmid DNA recovers with alcohol precipitation. Resuspension and lysis buffers should be mixed thoroughly in order to prevent the DNA from breaking into smaller fragments. This is because broken gDNA can reanneal and remain in the solution, without binding to the column.

DNA Plasmid Isolation E. coli DH5α

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