Immunohistochemistry CD31 Rat Mouse

- Found 3510 results

Western blotting is a widely used technique to size separate proteins from a pool of cell or tissue lysates. The technique has 4 major steps: a) gel electrophoresis, b) blocking and treatment with antigen specific antibody, c) treatment with secondary antibody and finally d) detection and visualization. Though western blotting is a widely used technique, detection of specific proteins depends on several factors, the major ones are antibody concentration, incubation time and washing steps. Key points for obtaining clean blots are: always prepare fresh buffer solutions and optimize antibody concentration. Given the advent of high-throughput protein analysis and a push to limit the use of lab consumables, onestep antibodies are developed which recognise protein of interest and also contain a detection label.

Proteins Western blotting Ras

Western blotting is a widely used technique to size separate proteins from a pool of cell or tissue lysates. The technique has 4 major steps: a) gel electrophoresis, b) blocking and treatment with antigen specific antibody, c) treatment with secondary antibody and finally d) detection and visualization. Though western blotting is a widely used technique, detection of specific proteins depends on several factors, the major ones are antibody concentration, incubation time and washing steps. Key points for obtaining clean blots are: always prepare fresh buffer solutions and optimize antibody concentration. Given the advent of high-throughput protein analysis and a push to limit the use of lab consumables, onestep antibodies are developed which recognise protein of interest and also contain a detection label.

Proteins Western blotting Rac1

In ChIP, the most vital step is the binding of an antibody and choosing the right antibody. The binding affinity of different types of immunoglobulins to protein A or G differs significantly. Henceforth, it is recommended to choose either protein A or protein G coated beads. If you do not see any product in the positive control, add 5–10 μg of chromatin and 1–5 μg of antibody to each IP reaction and incubate with antibody overnight and an additional 2 hr after adding Protein G/A beads. If no product is observed in the experimental sample, add more DNA to the PCR reaction or increase the number of amplification cycles. Furthermore, if you have any problem with antibodies, make sure to use the ChIP-validated antibody.

Proteins ChIP Anti-bodies RAD51

Get tips on using SASI_Hs01_00024301 to perform siRNA / miRNA gene silencing Human - MOLT4 RAG1

Products Sigma-Aldrich SASI_Hs01_00024301

Get tips on using TRIzol Reagent to perform RNA isolation / purification Cells - immortalized Raji

Products Thermo Fisher Scientific TRIzol Reagent

Get tips on using LC3B Antibody to perform Autophagy assay cell type - RAW 264.7

Products Novus Biologicals LC3B Antibody

Get tips on using RNeasy Mini Kit to perform RNA isolation / purification Cells - immortalized Raji

Products Qiagen RNeasy Mini Kit

Get tips on using ATG12 Antibody (166) to perform Autophagy assay cell type - RAW 264.7

Products Novus Biologicals ATG12 Antibody (166)

Get tips on using Minimum Essential Medium Eagle to perform Mammalian cell culture media RAOSMC

Products Sigma-Aldrich Minimum Essential Medium Eagle

Get tips on using Low Molecular Weight DNA Ladder to perform DNA Ladder Low Range

Products New England BioLabs Low Molecular Weight DNA Ladder

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