Pro-Q™ Diamond Phosphoprotein Gel Destaining Solution
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Invitrogen™

Pro-Q™ Diamond Phosphoprotein Gel Destaining Solution

Pro-Qダイアモンドリン酸化タンパク質ゲル染色剤は、アクリルアミドゲル中のリン酸化タンパク質を選択的に染色するための便利な方法を提供します。ブロッティングやリン酸化タンパク質特異的抗体、およびウェスタンブロット解析を行う必要はありません。Pro-Qダイアモンドリン酸化タンパク質ゲル脱色剤の調製については、ゲル染色プロトコルに記載されていますが、当社では、お客様の利便性を考慮して、事前に混合した脱色剤も提供しています詳細を見る
製品番号(カタログ番号)数量
P333101 L
P33311
または、製品番号P-33311
5 L
製品番号(カタログ番号) P33310
価格(JPY)
12,900
Online offer
Ends: 27-Mar-2026
21,500
割引額 8,600 (40%)
Each
お問い合わせください ›
数量:
1 L
一括またはカスタム形式をリクエストする
Pro-Qダイアモンドリン酸化タンパク質ゲル染色剤は、アクリルアミドゲル中のリン酸化タンパク質を選択的に染色するための便利な方法を提供します。ブロッティングやリン酸化タンパク質特異的抗体、およびウェスタンブロット解析を行う必要はありません。Pro-Qダイアモンドリン酸化タンパク質ゲル脱色剤の調製については、ゲル染色プロトコルに記載されていますが、当社では、お客様の利便性を考慮して、事前に混合した脱色剤も提供しています。
研究用途にのみご使用ください。診断目的には使用できません。
仕様
概要Diamond Phosphoprotein Gel Destaining Solution
検出位置ゲル内検出
検出法蛍光
製品ラインPro-Q
製品タイプリン酸化タンパク質ゲル脱染色液
数量1 L
出荷条件室温
標的分子タンパク質(リン酸化タンパク質)
標識または色素Pro-Qダイヤモンド
Unit SizeEach
組成および保存条件
室温保存。

よくあるご質問(FAQ)

I am observing poor specific signal in my gel stained with Pro-Q Diamond Phosphoprotein Gel Stain, or also observe a weak total protein staining pattern when I switch to a different excitation or emission filter. What is causing this?

Many total protein stains including SYPRO Ruby Gel Stain and Coomassie Blue stain will quench the Pro-Q Diamond signal. If you are staining your gels or blots with Pro-Q Diamond stain in containers that have previously been used for a total protein stain, you may be contaminating your gel with residue left on the staining dish from the total protein stain. Either use new containers, such as plastic weigh boats, designated containers for each stain, or rinse the container well in ethanol and wipe out any residual residue with a Kimwipe tissue.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Assays and Analysis Support Center.

I have only stained my gel with Pro-Q Diamond Phosphoprotein Gel Stain and am observing the same staining pattern I get with a total protein stain, including seeing all six bands in the PeppermintStick marker lane. A long destain does not improve specificity. What is happening?

This indicates that the Pro-Q Diamond dye has degraded and the staining solution should be discarded. Either the stain has been used past the stability period or it has been exposed to excessive room light during storage. Exposure to room light will gradually degrade the dye molecule, cleaving the phosphate-binding moiety and turning the dye into a non-specific protein stain. This will happen before the dye photobleaches, although the overall signal should be weaker than the specific signal obtained with non-degraded dye. It is likely not possible to save the stained gel, but you could try completely removing the dye by repeating the fixation step overnight, washing in water to remove fixative and then re-staining using a new stock of Pro-Q Diamond Phosphoprotein Gel Stain.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Assays and Analysis Support Center.

I have stained my gel with Pro-Q Diamond Phosphoprotein Gel Stain and am observing some staining of non-phosphorylated proteins, including seeing more than two bands in the PeppermintStick marker lane. What can I do to improve phosphoprotein staining specificity?

All SDS and fixative must be removed from the gel for optimal staining specificity. The fixation step removes the SDS and the water washes remove the fixative. To make sure that all the SDS and fixative are removed, it is necessary to do multiple changes in fixative solution followed by multiple changes in water. Larger or thicker gels may require increased volumes or incubation times in the fixative and water wash solutions, or the microwave staining procedure can be performed. The gel may need a longer time in destain solution. Return the gel to the destain solution and continue to incubate in destain solution until only two bands are visible in the PeppermintStick standard lane.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Assays and Analysis Support Center.

I am observing poor phosphoprotein-specific staining and a high background with Pro-Q Diamond Phosphoprotein Gel Stain. What is happening?

For Pro-Q Diamond Phosphoprotein Gel Stain to work properly, it is necessary to delipidate and desalt the sample prior to electrophoresis by following the chloroform/methanol precipitation procedure in the protocol. The Pro-Q Diamond dye will also bind phospholipids and the dye charge interaction with phosphates can be masked by the presence of counter ions and a high salt concentration.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Assays and Analysis Support Center.

Can I use other molecular weight standards with the Pro-Q Diamond Phosphoprotein stain?

Other known phosphoproteins can be used as positive control standards for the Pro-Q Diamond Phosphoprotein stain. Ovalbumin, in the Protein Molecular Weight Standards Reagent (Cat. No. P6649) is a phosphoprotein. None of the proteins in the Mark12, Invitrogen Sharp, SeeBlue or SeeBlue Plus2 standards is a phosphoprotein that could be used as a positive control with the Pro-Q Diamond Phosphoprotein stain.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Assays and Analysis Support Center.

引用および参考文献 (2)

引用および参考文献
Abstract
Protein stains for proteomic applications: which, when, why?
Authors:Miller I, Crawford J, Gianazza E,
Journal:Proteomics
PubMed ID:16991193
'This review recollects literature data on sensitivity and dynamic range for the most commonly used colorimetric and fluorescent dyes for general protein staining, and summarizes procedures for the most common PTM-specific detection methods. It also compiles some important points to be considered in imaging and evaluation. In addition to theoretical ... More
Strategies and solid-phase formats for the analysis of protein and peptide phosphorylation employing a novel fluorescent phosphorylation sensor dye.
Authors:Martin K, Steinberg TH, Goodman T, Schulenberg B, Kilgore JA, Gee KR, Beechem JM, Patton WF
Journal:Comb Chem High Throughput Screen
PubMed ID:12769676
Protein kinases represent one of the largest families of regulatory enzymes, with more than 2,000 of them being encoded for by the human genome. Many cellular processes are regulated by the reversible phosphorylation of proteins and upwards of 30% of the proteins comprising the eukaryotic proteome are likely to be ... More