RNA isolation / purification Tissue Human

- Found 7737 results

Cellular assays Cell Isolation Epithelial cell

Cellular assays Cell Isolation Pan-Granulocyte

Cellular assays Cell Isolation Dendritic Cell

Cellular assays Cell Isolation CD14+ cells

Cellular assays Cell Isolation Plasmacytoid DC

Cellular assays Cell Isolation CD138+ cells

Cellular assays Cell Isolation B cell

Cellular assays Cell Isolation CD34+ cells

Cellular assays Cell Isolation Depletion cocktail

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 A431 RCP/RAB11FIP1

Outsource your experiment

Fill out your contact details and receive price quotes in your Inbox

  Outsource experiment
Become shareholder Discussions About us Contact Privacy Terms