E-PAGE™ SeeBlue™ Pre-stained Standard
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Invitrogen™

E-PAGE™ SeeBlue™ Pre-stained Standard

Los estándares preteñidos E-PAGE SeeBlue están diseñados para utilizarse con el sistema de electroforesis prefundido E-PAGE. Los patrones constan deMás información
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Número de catálogoCantidad
LC5700500 μl
Número de catálogo LC5700
Precio (MXN)
-
Cantidad:
500 μl
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Los estándares preteñidos E-PAGE SeeBlue están diseñados para utilizarse con el sistema de electroforesis prefundido E-PAGE. Los patrones constan de tres bandas teñidas de azul y dos bandas de colores cuyos tamaños van de ∼ 21 a 261 kDa para la supervisión de las secuencias del gel y la transferencia. El patrón de proteínas se suministra en un formato listo para su uso para la carga directa en geles; sin necesidad de calentar, reducir ni añadir un tampón de muestras antes de usarlo.

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Aplicacaciones
• Supervisión de la migración de proteínas durante la electroforesis en gel de poliacrilamida-SDS
• Supervisión de la transferencia de proteínas a las membranas tras Western blots
• Dimensionamiento de proteínas en geles y Western blots E-PAGE

Para uso exclusivo en investigación. No apto para uso en procedimientos diagnósticos.
Especificaciones
Método de detecciónColorimétrico
Para utilizar con (aplicación)E-PAGE gels
Compatibilidad del gelGeles E-PAGE™
Peso molecular261, 173, 97, 42, 21 kDa
Línea de productosE-PAGE, SeeBlue
Tipo de productoMarcadores moleculares de proteínas
Cantidad500 μl
Listo para cargar
Aplicaciones recomendadasGeles E-PAGE
Condiciones de envíoHielo húmedo
Tipo de tinciónTres colores: azul, naranja, rosa
Tipo de sistemaE-PAGE
Number of Markers5
Intervalo de tamañosDe 21 a 261 kDa
Unit SizeEach
Contenido y almacenamiento
Contenido: 500 μL (50 aplicaciones de 10 μL cada una) del estándar preteñido E-PAGE SeeBlue

Tampón de almacenamiento: Tris-HCl, formamida y SDS

Almacenamiento: Estable durante 4 meses a +4 °C

Preguntas frecuentes

I used one of your protein standards for a western transfer and noticed that some of the lower-molecular weight protein bands passed through the membrane. How can I resolve this issue?

- Decrease voltage, current or length of transfer time
- Make sure that the methanol concentration in the transfer buffer is proper; use a methanol concentration of 10-20% methanol removes the SDS from SDS-protein complexes and improves the binding of protein to the membrane.
- Make sure that the SDS concentration (if added) in the transfer buffer is proper, don't use more than 0.02-0.04% SDS. Using too much SDS can prevent binding of proteins to the membrane.
- Check the pore size of the membrane and the size of the target protein. Proteins smaller than 10 kDa will easily pass through a 0.45 µm pore size membrane. If proteins smaller than 10 kDa are of interest, it would be better to use a 0.2 µm pore size membrane.

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

I used one of your protein standards for a western transfer and noticed that some of the higher-molecular weight bands transferred very poorly to the membrane. Can you offer some tips?

- Increase voltage, current or length of time for transfer
- SDS in the gel and in the SDS-protein complexes promotes elution of the protein from the gels but inhibits binding of the protein to membranes. This inhibition is higher for nitrocellulose than for PVDF. For proteins that are difficult to elute from the gel such as large molecular weight proteins, a small amount of SDS may be added to the transfer buffer to improve transfer. We recommend pre-equilibrating the gel in 2X Transfer buffer (without methanol) containing 0.02-0.04% SDS for 10 minutes before assembling the sandwich and then transferring using 1X transfer buffer containing 10% methanol and 0.01%SDS.
- Methanol removes the SDS from SDS-protein complexes and improves the binding of protein to the membrane, but has some negative effects on the gel itself, leading to a decrease in transfer efficiency. It may cause a reduction in pore size, precipitation of some proteins, and some basic proteins to become positively charged or neutral. Make sure that the methanol concentration in the transfer buffer is not more than 10-20% and that high-quality, analytical grade methanol is used.

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

I used one of your pre-stained standards on a Tris-Glycine gel and noticed that the molecular weights of the proteins were different than on a NuPAGE Bis-Tris gel. What is the reason for this?

Pre-stained standards have a dye that is covalently bound to each protein that will result in the standard migrating differently in different buffer systems (i.e., different gels). As a result, using a pre-stained standard for molecular weight estimation will only give the apparent molecular weight of the protein. Pre-stained standards may be used for molecular weight approximation, confirming gel migration and estimating blotting efficiency but for accurate molecular weight estimation, an unstained standard should be used.

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

I used one of your protein standards and am seeing some extra bands in the lane. Can you offer some suggestions?

- While loading, take care to make sure that there is no cross-contamination from adjacent sample lanes.
- Make sure that the correct amount of standard is loaded per lane. Loading too much protein can result in extra bands and this is a problem especially with silver-stained gels.
- Improper storage of the standard or repeated freeze/thawing can result in protein degradation.

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

I used one of your protein standards and the bands look non-distinct and smeary. What should I do?

Here are some suggestions:

- Make sure that the correct amount of standard is loaded per lane. Loading too much protein can cause smearing and this is a problem especially with silver stained gels.
- Bands will not be as well resolved in low percentage gels. Try using a higher percentage gel.
- If the bands look smeary and non-distinct after a western transfer/detection, this may be due to the antibody being too concentrated. Follow the manufacturer's recommended dilution or determine the optimal antibody concentration by dot-blotting.

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