Reporter gene assay β-lactamase substrates

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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 Rat C6 (rat glioma) mmp15

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 A127, U87MG, U251MG, T98G human glioblastoma cells

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 A549, NCI-H460, H1299 human alveolar carcinoma

Get tips on using Cell Comb™ Scratch Assay to perform Wound healing assay cell type - mouse MS1

Products Merck Millipore Cell Comb™ Scratch Assay

Get tips on using Cell Comb™ Scratch Assay to perform Wound healing assay cell type - human BEAS2B

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Get tips on using Cell Comb™ Scratch Assay to perform Wound healing assay cell type - human A549

Products Merck Millipore Cell Comb™ Scratch Assay

Get tips on using ROS-Glo™ H2O2 Assay to perform ROS assay cell type - MDA-MB-231

Products Promega ROS-Glo™ H2O2 Assay

Get tips on using MultiTox-Fluor Multiplex Cytotoxicity Assay to perform Live / Dead assay mammalian cells - RAW 264.7

Products Promega MultiTox-Fluor Multiplex Cytotoxicity Assay

Get tips on using In Vitro Angiogenesis Assay Kit to perform Angiogenesis assay human - bone marrow mononuclear cells

Products Merck Millipore In Vitro Angiogenesis Assay Kit

Get tips on using Cell Comb™ Scratch Assay to perform Wound healing assay cell type - mouse 3T3-L1

Products Merck Millipore Cell Comb™ Scratch Assay

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