A western blot is a laboratory method used to detect specific protein molecules from among a mixture of proteins. This mixture can include all of the proteins associated with a particular tissue or ...
Discover how decisions about experimental design can affect Western blotting reproducibility – and how to make the right decisions in this webinar from Sally Mulford, Sr Molecular Biologist at LI-COR ...
Reviewed by Michael Greenwood, M.Sc. Fluorescent western blotting is a powerful protein detection technique that offers numerous benefits in comparison to alternative chemiluminescent or chromogenic ...
The formation of new blood vessels by angiogenesis is important for tumor growth beyond 2 mm 3 in size. Over the past decade anti-angiogenic therapies that slow blood vessel growth, often by ...
A capillary western blot (Wes) technology has recently been validated for analyses of cell culture lysate proteins, but whether it is reliable for human tissue proteins is unknown. We compared ...
Immunohistochemistry and Western blotting both work by exploiting the principle of how antibodies specifically bind to the antigens present in biological tissue. Immunohistochemistry is the most ...
One lab technique that has been around since what feels like the dawn of time is Western blotting, and it doesn’t look like it's going away anytime soon. Utilized by scientists worldwide, the Western ...
Western blotting has, despite the initial unclear potential and its limitations, matured into an essential biochemical technique. This year marks the 40th anniversary of Western blotting [1]. Briefly, ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results