siRNA / miRNA gene silencing Human HNSCC cell line Eph receptor B4

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TUNEL assay is the cell death detection method where the biochemical marker of apoptosis is DNA fragmentation. The assay involves the microscopical detection of generated DNA fragments with free 3'-hydroxyl residues. in apoptotic cells using enzyme terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT) which adds biotinylated nucleotides at the site of DNA breaks. Major challenges of this method involve proper access of the enzyme which could be hampered by poor permeabilization and/or excessive fixation with cross-linking fixative (common with archival tissue). This issue can be resolved by optimizing the incubation time with Proteinase K or CytoninTM.

Cellular assays TUNEL assay cell type Rabbit synovial fibroblasts

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 Mammalian cells Human eutopic endometrial stromal cells

Get tips on using Nucleofector™ Kits for Human T Cells to perform DNA transfection Mammalian cells - Primary cells CD8+ T cells

Products Lonza Nucleofector™ Kits for Human T Cells

Get tips on using Nucleofector™ Kits for Human T Cells to perform DNA transfection Mammalian cells - Primary cells CD4+ T cells

Products Lonza Nucleofector™ Kits for Human T Cells

Get tips on using Anti-Human L1CAM Therapeutic Antibody Fab Fragment to perform Flow cytometry Anti-bodies Human - CD171/L1CAM

Products Creative BioLabs Anti-Human L1CAM Therapeutic Antibody Fab Fragment

Get tips on using RNeasy Mini Kit to perform RNA isolation / purification Cells - Cancer cell lines Liver cancer cell lines Hepato cellular carcenoma (SMMC-7721, Huh7 & HepG2))

Products Qiagen RNeasy Mini Kit

Get tips on using PE Mouse Anti-Human CD31 Clone L133.1 to perform Flow cytometry Anti-bodies Human - CD31/PECAM-1

Products BD Biosciences PE Mouse Anti-Human CD31 Clone L133.1

Get tips on using PE anti-human CD111 (Nectin-1) Antibody to perform Flow cytometry Anti-bodies Human - CD111/Nectin-1

Products BioLegend PE anti-human CD111 (Nectin-1) Antibody

Get tips on using PE anti-human CD126 (IL-6Rα) Antibody to perform Flow cytometry Anti-bodies Human - CD126/IL-6Ralpha

Products BioLegend PE anti-human CD126 (IL-6Rα) Antibody

ELISA is the most commonly used method of detecting and quantifying the concentration of an antigen in an unknown sample. During the experiment, If you get a weak signal, then make sure reagents are at room temperature before starting the assay. Try increasing incubation times to ensure maximal antibody binding and amplify the signal. Secondly, if you get values above 0 in the negative control indicates a high background signal. Try to consider reducing your antibody concentration and prevent non-specific binding of antibodies by using affinity-purified antibody and suitable blocking buffers. To avoid high well to well variation, do not stack plates during incubation, no bubbles in the plate and wash wells thoroughly to avoid variation.

Proteins ELISA Human C-Reactive Protein/CRP

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