Novex™ Tricine Mini Protein Gels, 10%, 1.0 mm
Novex™ Tricine Mini Protein Gels, 10%, 1.0 mm
Invitrogen™

Novex™ Tricine Mini Protein Gels, 10%, 1.0 mm

Invitrogen Novex Tricine Gels provide separation of low molecular weight proteins and peptides. In this system tricine replaces glycine in the running buffer, resulting in more efficient stacking and destacking for low molecular weight proteins and higher resolution of smaller peptides.
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Catalog NumberWells
EC6675BOX10-well
EC66752BOX12-well
Catalog number EC6675BOX
Price (MXN)
-
Wells:
10-well
Invitrogen Novex Tricine Gels provide separation of low molecular weight proteins and peptides. The Tricine system is a modification of the tris-glycine discontinuous buffer system developed by Schaegger and von Jagow (Schaegger and von Jagow, 1987) specifically for resolving peptides and low molecular weight proteins. In this system the tricine replaces the glycine in the running buffer, resulting in more efficient stacking and destacking for low molecular weight proteins and higher resolution of smaller peptides.

Features of Novex Tricine protein gels:
• Increased resolution of proteins with molecular weights as low as 2 kDa
• Improved compatibility with direct sequencing of proteins after transferring to PVDF
• Minimized protein modification due to the lower pH of the tricine buffering system

Formulation
Invitrogen Tricine gels are made with high-purity, strictly quality-controlled reagents: Tris base, HCl, acrylamide, bisacrylamide, TEMED, APS, and highly purified water. Our Tricine gels have a 4% stacking gel and do not contain SDS. The Tricine system requires SDS in sample and running buffers for best results.

Choose the right Tricine gel for your protein separation
Invitrogen Tricine gels come in three polyacrylamide concentrations of 10%, 16%, and a gradient of 10–20%. Select from our many well formats, including 10-, 12-, and 15-well. Tricine gels are formulated for denaturing gel electrophoresis applications. For optimal sample preparation, we recommend Tricine SDS Sample Buffer (LC1676) and optimal separation use Tricine SDS Running Buffer (LC1675).

For transfer of proteins to a membrane, we recommend using the Novex Tris-Glycine Transfer Buffer (LC3675) if performing a traditional wet transfer using the XCell II Blot Module (EI9051) or the Mini Blot Module (B1000). Rapid semi-dry transfer can be performed using the Invitrogen Power Blotter or rapid dry transfer using the iBlot 2 Gel Transfer Device (IB21001).

For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.
Specifications
Gel Thickness1.0 mm
Length (Metric)8 cm
Mode of SeparationMolecular Weight
Product LineNovex
Quantity10 Gels/Box
Recommended ApplicationsDenaturing
Sample Loading VolumeUp to 25 μL
Shelf Life16 Weeks
Shipping ConditionWet Ice
Storage RequirementsStore at 2°C to 8°C. Do not freeze.
Width (Metric)8 cm
For Use With (Equipment)Mini Gel Tank, XCell SureLock Mini-Cell
Gel Percentage10%
Gel SizeMini
Gel TypeTricine
Separation Range6 to 220 kDa
Separation TypeDenaturing
Wells10-well
Unit SizeEach

Frequently asked questions (FAQs)

Why do Invitrogen Tricine gels work better for smaller proteins and peptides?

The Tricine gel system, first described by Schagger and von Jagow in 1987, is a modification of the Laemmli Tris-Glycine system to allow for better resolution of smaller proteins and peptides. In the Laemmli system, the proteins are "stacked" in the porous top portion of the gel (stacking gel) between a highly mobile "leading" chloride ion present in the gel buffer and the slower "trailing" glycine ion supplied by the running buffer. These concentrated, thin bands of protein undergo sieving once they reach the resolving gel, which separates them by size.

The resolution of smaller proteins (under 5 kDa) is hindered by the continuous accumulation of free dodecyl-sulfate (DS) ions (from the SDS sample and running buffers) in the stack. This build-up of DS leads to convective mixing of the DS ions with the smaller proteins, causing fuzzy bands and decreased resolution. The mixing of the DS ions with the small proteins will also interfere with the fixing and staining process later. To solve this problem, Schagger and von Jagow replaced the trailing glycine ion with a faster moving Tricine trailing ion. Many small proteins which run with the stacked DS in the Tris Glycine system will separate from DS in the Tricine gel system, resulting in sharper, cleaner bands and better resolution.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Electrophoresis and Western Blotting Support Center.

What does it mean when bands appear to be getting narrower (or "funneling") as they progress down a protein gel?

There may be too much beta-mercaptoethanol (BME), sample buffer salts, or dithiothreitol (DTT) in your samples. If the proteins are over-reduced, they can be negatively charged and actually repel each other across the lanes causing the bands to get narrower as they progress down the gel.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Electrophoresis and Western Blotting Support Center.

What causes dumbbell- or barbell-shaped bands during protein electrophoresis?

Barbell-shaped bands are a result of loading too large a sample volume.

When a large sample volume is loaded, part of the sample tends to diffuse to the sides of the wells. When the run begins and the sample moves through the stacking portion of the gel, the sample will stack incompletely, causing a slight retardation of the portion of the sample that diffused to the sides of the wells.

This effect may be intensified in larger proteins, whose migration is more impeded in the low concentration acrylamide of the stacking gel.

To alleviate the problem, concentrate the protein and load a smaller volume. This gives a "thinner" starting zone.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Electrophoresis and Western Blotting Support Center.

What can cause "streaking forward" or "frowning" of samples on a SDS-PAGE gel? How can the results be improved?

Some potential causes are:

1) Re-oxidation of protein during run

2) Protein has highly hydrophobic regions where protein can exclude SDS.

Steps you can take to improve results:

1) Reduce samples right before loading, and add antioxidant to running buffer. Do not use samples that have been stored in reducing agent.

2) Load sample with 2X sample buffer instead of 1X.

3) Add SDS to upper chamber buffer: try 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, and 0.4% (don't go any higher than 0.4%)

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Electrophoresis and Western Blotting Support Center.

Will NP-40 affect the migration of the samples in the SDS-PAGE gel?

Yes. All detergents and even phospholipids in cell extracts will form mixed micelles with SDS and migrate down into the gel.

They can also interfere with the SDS:protein binding equilibrium. Most of the nonionic detergents significantly interfere with SDS-PAGE.

We recommend that you keep the ratio of SDS to lipid or other detergent at 10:1 (or greater) to minimize these effects.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our Protein Electrophoresis and Western Blotting Support Center.

Citations & References (5)

Citations & References
Abstract
Immune response to Yersinia outer proteins and other Yersinia pestis antigens after experimental plague infection in mice.
Authors:Benner GE, Andrews GP, Byrne WR, Strachan SD, Sample AK, Heath DG, Friedlander AM,
Journal:Infect Immun
PubMed ID:10085037
'There is limited information concerning the nature and extent of the immune response to the virulence determinants of Yersinia pestis during the course of plague infection. In this study, we evaluated the humoral immune response of mice that survived lethal Y. pestis aerosol challenge after antibiotic treatment. Such a model ... More
Aggregation of the Fc epsilon RI in mast cells induces the synthesis of Fos-interacting protein and increases its DNA binding-activity: the dependence on protein kinase C-beta.
Authors:Lewin I, Jacob-Hirsch J, Zang ZC, Kupershtein V, Szallasi Z, Rivera J, Razin E,
Journal:J Biol Chem
PubMed ID:8576146
The ability of c-Fos to dimerize with various proteins creates transcription complexes which can exert their regulatory function on a variety of genes. One of the transcription factors that binds to c-Fos is the newly discovered Fos-interacting protein (FIP). In this report we present evidence for the regulation of the ... More
Purification and characterization of a membrane-bound hydrogenase from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus
Authors:Sapra R, Verhagen MF, Adams MW
Journal:J Bacteriol
PubMed ID:10852873
Highly washed membrane preparations from cells of the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus contain high hydrogenase activity (9.4 micromol of H(2) evolved/mg at 80 degrees C) using reduced methyl viologen as the electron donor. The enzyme was solubilized with n-dodecyl-beta-D-maltoside and purified by multistep chromatography in the presence of Triton X-100. ... More
Enzyme-substrate intermediate at a specific lysine residue is required for deoxyhypusine synthesis. The role of Lys329 in human deoxyhypusine synthase.
Authors:Joe YA, Wolff EC, Lee YB, Park MH,
Journal:J Biol Chem
PubMed ID:9405486
Deoxyhypusine synthase catalyzes the first step in the post-translational synthesis of hypusine [Nepsilon-(4-amino-2-hydroxybutyl)lysine] in eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A. We recently reported biochemical evidence for a covalent enzyme-substrate intermediate involving a specific lysine residue (Lys329) in human deoxyhypusine synthase (Wolff, E. C., Folk, J. E., and Park, M. H. (1997) ... More
Anti-tumor antibody BR96 blocks cell migration and binds to a lysosomal membrane glycoprotein on cell surface microspikes and ruffled membranes.
Authors:Garrigues J, Anderson J, Hellström KE, Hellström I,
Journal:J Cell Biol
PubMed ID:7511141
BR 96 is an internalizing antibody that binds to Lewis Y (Le(y)), a carbohydrate determinant expressed at high levels on many human carcinomas (Hellström, I., H. J. Garrigues, U. Garrigues, and K. E. Hellström. 1990. Cancer Res. 50:2183-2190). Breast carcinoma cell lines grown to confluence bind less BR96 than subconfluent ... More