FACS CD14 Mouse

- Found 2613 results

Get tips on using Imprint® Chromatin Immunoprecipitation Kit to perform ChIP Mouse - CD4+ T

Products Sigma-Aldrich Imprint® Chromatin Immunoprecipitation Kit

Get tips on using ShRNA CD24 Lentiviral Transduction Particles (CD24-V2LHS_71909)) to perform shRNA gene silencing Mouse - Prostate cancer cell lines (DU145 and PC3) CD24 lentiviral particles

Products Dharmacon (GE Life Sciences) ShRNA CD24 Lentiviral Transduction Particles (CD24-V2LHS_71909))

Get tips on using ShRNA CD24 Lentiviral Transduction Particles (CD24-V2LHS_71908) to perform shRNA gene silencing Mouse - Prostate cancer cell lines (DU145 and PC3) CD24 lentiviral particles

Products Dharmacon (GE Life Sciences) ShRNA CD24 Lentiviral Transduction Particles (CD24-V2LHS_71908)

Get tips on using CD4 Monoclonal Antibody (GK1.5), eBioscience™ to perform Flow cytometry Anti-bodies Mouse - CD4

Products eBioscience CD4 Monoclonal Antibody (GK1.5), eBioscience™

Flow cytometry is an immunophenotyping technique whereby sing cell suspensions are stained for either cell surface markers or intracellular proteins by fluorescently-labelled antibodies and analyzed with a flow cytometer, where fluorescently-labelled molecules are excited by the laser to emit light at varying wavelengths, which is then detected by the instrument. There are several key criteria which are required to be kept in mind while designing a flow experiment- 1. Antibody titration (optimal dilution of antibodies should be calculated in order to avoid over- or under- saturated signals for proper detection of surface and intracellular markers), 2. Precision (3 or more replicates of the sample should be used per experiment), 3. Specificity (proper isotype controls should be included in the experiment), 4. Day-to-day variability (experiments should be repeated 3 or more times to ensure consistency and avoid variability due to flow cytometer settings), 5. Antibody interaction (Fluorescence minus one or FMO should be used, which is the comparison of signals from panel minus one antibody vs. the full panel), and 6. Antibody stability (fluorescently-labelled antibodies should be stored at 4C).

Proteins Flow cytometry Anti-bodies Human CD184/CXCR4

Flow cytometry is an immunophenotyping technique whereby sing cell suspensions are stained for either cell surface markers or intracellular proteins by fluorescently-labelled antibodies and analyzed with a flow cytometer, where fluorescently-labelled molecules are excited by the laser to emit light at varying wavelengths, which is then detected by the instrument. There are several key criteria which are required to be kept in mind while designing a flow experiment- 1. Antibody titration (optimal dilution of antibodies should be calculated in order to avoid over- or under- saturated signals for proper detection of surface and intracellular markers), 2. Precision (3 or more replicates of the sample should be used per experiment), 3. Specificity (proper isotype controls should be included in the experiment), 4. Day-to-day variability (experiments should be repeated 3 or more times to ensure consistency and avoid variability due to flow cytometer settings), 5. Antibody interaction (Fluorescence minus one or FMO should be used, which is the comparison of signals from panel minus one antibody vs. the full panel), and 6. Antibody stability (fluorescently-labelled antibodies should be stored at 4C).

Proteins Flow cytometry Anti-bodies Human CD114
hCas9 Product

Get tips on using hCas9 to perform CRISPR Mouse - Deletion Dck

Products Addgene hCas9

Get tips on using BrdU antibody to perform Immunohistochemistry Mouse - BrdU

Products Bio-Rad Laboratories BrdU antibody

Get tips on using LC3B Antibody to perform Immunohistochemistry Mouse - LC3

Products Novus Biologicals LC3B Antibody

Get tips on using LC3B Antibody to perform Immunohistochemistry Mouse - LC3

Products Novus Biologicals LC3B Antibody

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