Protein expression and purification Mammalian cells HEK 293

- Found 9667 results

Get tips on using De Man, Rogosa and Sharpe (MRS) Broth to perform Bacterial cell culture media Lactobacillus paracasei

Products Merck Millipore De Man, Rogosa and Sharpe (MRS) Broth

Get tips on using De Man, Rogosa and Sharpe (MRS) Broth to perform Bacterial cell culture media Lactobacillus plantarum

Products Merck Millipore De Man, Rogosa and Sharpe (MRS) Broth

Wound healing assay can be challenging due to inconsistencies and variations while making a wound on the confluent cell monolayer, consequently leads to wounds of varying sizes and widths. Moreover, this assay causes damage to the cells that are at the edge of the wound, which can prevent cell migration into the wound site and healing. The best solution is to use the standard wound healing assay kits using either combs or inserts to make a defined wound field or gap and prevent the well-to-well variation in these assays.

Cellular assays Wound healing assay cell type human gHMVEC (glioma human microvascular endothelial cells)

Get tips on using RealTime-Glo™ MT Cell Viability Assay to perform Live / Dead assay mammalian cells - INS-1 832/12

Products Promega RealTime-Glo™ MT Cell Viability Assay

Get tips on using PicoGreen® dsDNA Quantitation Reagent and Kit to perform DNA quantification Blood

Products Thermo Fisher Scientific PicoGreen® dsDNA Quantitation Reagent and Kit

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 Salmonella Heidelberg

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 Helicobacter pylori phage DNA

Get tips on using LIVE/DEAD™ Fixable Aqua Dead Cell Stain Kit to perform Live / Dead assay mammalian cells - mouse keratinocytes

Products Thermo Fisher Scientific LIVE/DEAD™ Fixable Aqua Dead Cell Stain Kit

Get tips on using GenJet™ In Vitro DNA Transfection Reagent to perform DNA transfection Mammalian cells - Immortalized cell lines MCF-7

Products SignaGen Laboratories GenJet™ In Vitro DNA Transfection Reagent

Get tips on using X-tremeGENE™ HP DNA Transfection Reagent to perform DNA transfection Mammalian cells - Immortalized cell lines PANC-1

Products Sigma-Aldrich X-tremeGENE™ HP DNA Transfection Reagent

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