| Description | Product Introduction:Due to the low stoichiometry of phosphorylation, the concentration of phosphopeptides is a key step for the successful implementation of phosphoproteomics experiments. PolyMAC provides an effective and significantly improved method to achieve more complete enrichment of Product Introduction:Due to the low stoichiometry of phosphorylation, the concentration of phosphopeptides is a key step for the successful implementation of phosphoproteomics experiments. PolyMAC provides an effective and significantly improved method to achieve more complete enrichment of phosphopeptides. This highly selective enrichment method can be used for most complex samples because it offers optimal specificity and recovery rate. PolyMAC is a polymer-based immobilized metal ion affinity capture method with excellent phosphoproteome coverage and recovery rate. It is a soluble nanopolymer designed to interact with phosphopeptides in solution, and then be captured on a solid-phase carrier for washing and phosphopeptide elution. Compared with the commonly used titanium dioxide and immobilized metal ion affinity capture methods, PolyMAC has better reproducibility and enrichment of phosphorylated peptides, with the selectivity of phosphorylated peptides close to 95% and the recovery rate > 90%. Importantly, PolyMAC has very good recovery rate and selectivity for samples with low total protein phosphorylation levels.Experimental Flowchart of Phosphopeptide Protein (Peptide Fragment) Extraction Kit (P1456460)Product Components and Storage Conditions:P1456460Component24T48T96TStorageP1456460APolyMAC Beads0.75 mL1.5 mL3 mL4℃P1456460BPolyMAC Loading Buffer25 mL50 mL100 mLRTP1456460CPolyMAC Washing Buffer I25 mL50 mL100 mLRTP1456460DPolyMAC Washing Buffer II25 mL50 mL100 mLRTP1456460EPolyMAC Elution Buffer3.75 mL7.5 mL15 mLRTP1456460FPolyMAC Tips24T48T96TRTProduct Features:Easy to operate: Phosphopeptides can be prepared quickly, requiring only a metal bath and a conventional centrifuge.High stability: Strict quality inspection is conducted for each batch, ensuring high reproducibility of experimental results.Operating Procedure:1.Add 200 µL of Loading Buffer to the dried sample (50 µg - 100 µg) after enzymatic hydrolysis and desalting, and fully resuspend the sample.2.Vortex the PolyMAC Beads thoroughly (for 10 - 20 seconds), then take 25 µL into a 1.5 mL centrifuge tube, centrifuge instantaneously for 2 - 3 seconds, and then remove the upper storage solution. (The Beads settle quickly, so the operation should be fast when taking them.)3.Add the resuspended sample to the centrifuge tube containing PolyMAC Beads, then place it on a mixer, and shake vigorously at 26°C, >1200 rpm for 25 minutes.4.Add the sample to PolyMAC - Tips, first centrifuge at 20 g for 2 minutes, then centrifuge at 100 g for 1 minute to ensure that the sample solution flows out from the tip of the Tips into the centrifuge tube. (The rotation speed should not be too high, and the operation should be fast.)5.Wash once with 200 µL of Loading Buffer: first centrifuge at 20 g for 2 minutes, then centrifuge at 100 g for 1 minute, and discard the filtrate. Repeat this step 3 times. (The rotation speed should not be too high, and the operation should be fast.)6.Wash once with 200 µL of Washing Buffer I: first centrifuge at 20 g for 2 minutes, then centrifuge at 100 g for 1 minute, and discard the filtrate. Repeat this step 3 times. (The rotation speed should not be too high, and the operation should be fast.)7.Wash once with 200 µL of Washing Buffer II: first centrifuge at 20 g for 2 minutes, then centrifuge at 100 g for 1 minute, and discard the filtrate. Repeat this step 3 times. (The rotation speed should not be too high, and the operation should be fast.)8.Put the Tips into a new centrifuge tube to collect the eluted phosphopeptides. Add 50 µL of Elution Buffer to the Tips, centrifuge at 20 g for 2 minutes, then add another 50 µL of Elution Buffer, first centrifuge at 20 g for 2 minutes, then centrifuge at 100 g for 1 minute, and collect the filtrate. (The rotation speed should not be too high, and the operation should be fast.)Note: In steps 4 - 8, if the liquid flows down slowly, the rotation speed can be increased appropriately, gradually increasing to 50 g, and do not increase too much at one time!9.If there is any solution remaining in the pipette tip, push it out into the collection tube with a pipette, lyophilize it, and store it at -80°C for mass spectrometry detection.Precautions:This product is only for scientific research use by professionals, and shall not be used for clinical diagnosis or treatment, nor for food or drugs... Read More | This reagent kit is suitable for simultaneously isolating and purifying genomic DNA, total RNA, and total protein from the same cell or tissue sample. This product does not require dividing the sample into three parts to extract DNA, RNA, and protein separately, nor does it require dividing the This reagent kit is suitable for simultaneously isolating and purifying genomic DNA, total RNA, and total protein from the same cell or tissue sample. This product does not require dividing the sample into three parts to extract DNA, RNA, and protein separately, nor does it require dividing the purified total nucleic acid into two parts before purifying DNA and RNA separately. Therefore, it can maximize the recovery of DNA, RNA, and protein, and can be used for the purification of nucleic acid and protein in small and rare samples. The purified DNA, RNA, and protein can be eluted separately and directly applied to various downstream molecular biology operations. This reagent kit does not contain toxic substances such as phenol and chloroform, and does not require ethanol precipitation. The operation is simple and fast. The extracted genomic DNA can be used for PCR, Real time PCR, SouthBlot, Dot Blot, comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), gene analysis, and SNP analysis; Total RNA can be applied in experiments such as RT-PCR, cDNA synthesis, Northern Blot, Dot Blot, and gene chips; Total protein can be applied in electrophoresis and Western Blot, among others. A665492 Component 50 T Storage A665492A Buffer RL 35 mL RT A665492B Buffer RW1 40 mL RT A665492C Buffer RW2 (concentrate) 11 mL RT A665492D RNase-Free Water 10 mL RT A665492E Buffer GW1 (concentrate) 13 mL RT A665492F Buffer GW2 (concentrate) 15 mL RT A665492G Buffer GE 15 mL RT A665492H Buffer PZ 60 mL RT A665492I Buffer PLS 15 mL RT A665492J Spin Columns DM with Collection Tubes 50 sets RT A665492K Spin Columns RM with Collection Tubes 50 sets RT A665492L Collection Tubes 100 EA RT A665492M RNase-Free Centrifuge Tubes (1.5 mL) 100 EA RTSelf prepared reagents:β- Mercaptoethanol (for newly opened or RNA extraction), 70% ethanol (prepared with water without RNase), and anhydrous ethanol.Preparation and important precautions before the experiment:To prevent RNase pollution, attention should be paid to the following aspects:1) Use plastic products and gun heads without RNase to avoid cross contamination.2) Glassware should be dry baked at a high temperature of 180 ℃ for 4 hours before use, while plastic containers can be soaked in 0.5 M NaOH for 10 minutes, thoroughly rinsed with water, and then sterilized under high pressure.3) The solution should be prepared using water without RNase.4) Operators should wear disposable masks and gloves, and change gloves frequently during the experiment.2. The sample should avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles, otherwise it will affect the quality of DNA, RNA, and protein extraction. The sample can be stored in Buffer RL at -70 ℃ for one month.3. Please add Buffer RL before use β- Mercaptoethanol, 1 ml Buffer RL with 10 µ L β- Mercaptoethanol. join β- The buffer RL room temperature of mercaptoethanol can be stored for one month.Before the first use, anhydrous ethanol should be added to Buffer RW2, Buffer GW1, and Buffer GW2 according to the instructions on the reagent bottle label.5. Before use, please check if there is any crystallization or precipitation in the Buffer RL. If there is any crystallization or precipitation, please dissolve it again in a 56 ℃ water bath.6. All centrifugation steps are performed using a desktop centrifuge at room temperature. Operation steps:1. Material processing1a The cells cultured on the wall should be first processed into cell suspension (maximum extraction amount of 107 cells), collected cells, discarded the culture medium, and added 600 cells µ L Buffer RL (check if it has been added before use) β- Mercaptoethanol), repeatedly blow and beat to fully decompose.Attention: It is necessary to discard the culture medium completely, otherwise it will affect the lysis and subsequent nucleic acid purification steps.1b Take no more than 30 mg of animal tissue, grind it into fine powder with liquid nitrogen, and add 600 µ Buffer RL (check if it has been added before use) β- Mercaptoethanol, or directly add 600 µ L Buffer RL (check if it has been added before use) β- Mercaptoethanol, homogenization treatment.Attention: The homogenate should be sufficient, otherwise it will affect RNA production.2. Centrifuge the solution obtained in the previous step at 12000 rpm (~13400 × g) for 3-5 minutes. Carefully add the supernatant to the spin columns DM that have been loaded into the collection tube. Centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 30-60 seconds and collect the filtrate. Place the adsorption column DM in a new 2 ml collection tube at room temperature or 4 ℃ for DNA extraction. Attention: Ensure that there is no liquid residue on the adsorption column, and if necessary, repeat centrifugation until all liquids pass through the membrane of the adsorption column. Total RNA extraction3. Add 1 volume of 70% ethanol (prepared without RNase water) to the filtrate obtained in step 2, and mix well.4. Add all the solution obtained in the previous step to the spin columns RM that have been loaded into the collection tube. If the solution cannot be added completely at once, it can be transferred in stages. Centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 20 seconds and retain the liquid in the collection tube for protein extraction.5. Place the adsorption column RM into a new 2ml collection tube and add 700 to the adsorption column RM µ L Buffer RW1, centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 20 seconds, discard the waste liquid in the collection tube, and place the adsorption column RM into the recovery manifold.6. Add 500 to the adsorption column RM µ Buffer RW2 (check if anhydrous ethanol has been added before use), centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 20 seconds, discard the waste liquid in the collection tube, and place the adsorption column RM back into the 2 ml collection tube.7. Repeat step 6.Centrifuge at 8.12000 rpm for 2 minutes and discard the waste liquid from the collection tube. Place the adsorption column at room temperature for a few minutes to thoroughly air dry. Attention: The purpose of this step is to remove residual ethanol from the adsorption column, which can affect subsequent enzymatic reactions (such as enzyme digestion, PCR, etc.).9. Place the adsorption column RM in a new 1.5 ml centrifuge tube without RNase, and add 30-50 to the middle of the adsorption column RM µ Place RNase Free Water at room temperature for 2-5 minutes, centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 1 minute, collect RNA solution, and store RNA at -70 ℃ to prevent degradation.Attention:1) The volume of RNase Free Water should not be less than 30 µ l. Small volume affects the recovery rate.2) If you want to increase RNA production, you can use 30-50 µ Repeat step 9 for the new RNase Free Water.3) If you want to increase the RNA concentration, you can add the obtained solution back to the adsorption column and repeat step 9.Genomic DNA extraction10. Add 500 to the adsorption column DM µ Buffer GW1 (check if anhydrous ethanol has been added before use), centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 20 seconds, discard the waste liquid in the collection tube, and place the adsorption column DM into the recovery tube.11. Add 500 to the adsorption column DM µ Buffer GW2 (check if anhydrous ethanol has been added before use), centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 2 minutes, discard the waste liquid in the collection tube, and place the adsorption column DM into the recovery tube. Attention: To further improve DNA purity, repeat step 11.Centrifuge at 12.12000 rpm for 2 minutes and discard the waste liquid from the collection tube. Place the adsorption column DM at room temperature for a few minutes to thoroughly dry the ethanol in the column. Attention: The purpose of this step is to remove residual ethanol from the adsorption column, which can affect subsequent enzymatic reactions (such as enzyme digestion, PCR, etc.).13. Place the adsorption column DM in a new centrifuge tube and add 100 to the middle of the adsorption column DM by suspending it in the air µ L Buffer GE, leave at room temperature for 2-5 minutes, centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 2 minutes, collect DNA solution, and store DNA at -20 ℃.Attention:1) The volume of Buffer GE should not be less than 100 µ l. Small volume affects the recovery rate.2) If we want to increase DNA production, we will µ Add a new Buffer GE to the adsorption column and repeat step 13; If you want to increase the DNA concentration, you can add the DNA eluent obtained in step 13 back onto the adsorption column and repeat step 13.Protein extraction14. Add 1 volume of Buffer PZ to the RNA extraction effluent (i.e. the solution obtained in step 4), mix well, and let it stand at room temperature for 10-30 minutes.Centrifuge at 15.12000 rpm for 10 minutes and discard the supernatant.16. Add 500 µ Centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 1 minute with 70% ethanol, and try to absorb the supernatant as much as possible.17. Place the centrifuge tube at room temperature for a few minutes to dry the precipitate.Attention: The purpose of this step is to remove residual ethanol. Excessive drying can make protein precipitation difficult to dissolve, and incomplete drying of residual ethanol can affect protein loading.18. Add 100 µ L Buffer PLS to obtain protein solution.Attention:1) The protein samples obtained by dissolving with Buffer PLS are suitable for SDS-PAGE and Western Blot detection, but not for Bradford method for protein quantification. If Bradford method is needed for protein quantification, 5% SDS can be used to dissolve the protein, or suitable protein dissolution buffer can be selected based on downstream experiments.2) The amount of dissolved protein buffer added is determined based on the initial sample size and specific downstream test requirements.3) The dissolved protein can be stored at -20 ℃ for several months and at 2-8 ℃ for several days.If protein samples require SDS-PAGE electrophoresis, the following operations can be performed:19. Add protein loading buffer to the protein sample, denature at 95 ℃ for 5-10 minutes, and cool the sample to room temperature. Centrifuge at 20.12000 rpm for 1 minute, extract the supernatant for downstream SDS-PAGE or Western blot tests... Read More | Ketone bodies, 3-hydroxybutyric acid (BOH) and acetoacetic acid (AcAc), are produced in the liver primarily from oxidation of fatty acids, and are normally present at low concentrations in urine and blood. Increased ketone concentrations in the blood may lead to metabolic acidosis, which has been Ketone bodies, 3-hydroxybutyric acid (BOH) and acetoacetic acid (AcAc), are produced in the liver primarily from oxidation of fatty acids, and are normally present at low concentrations in urine and blood. Increased ketone concentrations in the blood may lead to metabolic acidosis, which has been associated with diabetes, childhood hypoglycemia, growth hormone deficiency, alcohol or salicylate intoxication, and inborn errors of metabolism.Ketone Body Assay has been used to measure the release of ketone bodies in the human liver cancer cell line HepG2 culture medium... Read More | Product introduction:Reporter gene detection is an important tool for analyzing the interaction between potential cis elements (such as promoters, enhancers and silencers) and trans acting factors in the flanking region of structural genes in the field of modern molecular biology. Firefly Product introduction:Reporter gene detection is an important tool for analyzing the interaction between potential cis elements (such as promoters, enhancers and silencers) and trans acting factors in the flanking region of structural genes in the field of modern molecular biology. Firefly luciferase is widely used in gene regulation and drug screening. Firefly luciferase is a protein with a molecular weight of about 61 KD. In the presence of ATP, magnesium ions and oxygen, it can catalyze the production of oxyluciferin from luciferin. In the process of luciferin oxidation, it will produce a light signal. The optical signal of this kit is a kind of instantaneous light, which needs to be detected immediately after adding the working solution. The half-life of optical signal is about 5 min.Instruction:1.Working fluid configuration ( 1 ) Restore all components to room temperature. ( 2 ) The component B ( stock solution ) was fully diluted with component A to prepare a 0.2 mg / mL firefly luciferase working solution, which was vortexed and shaken to ensure full mixing. Note : The firefly luciferase working solution cannot be repeatedly frozen and thawed. If the dosage of a single experiment is small, it is recommended to subpackage according to a single dosage. At room temperature, the activity decreased by about 10 % after the working solution was configured for 3 h, and the activity decreased by about 25 % after 5 h. 2.chemiluminescence value detection ( 1 ) The cell culture plate was taken out from the incubator and incubated at room temperature for 20 min to restore it to room temperature ( 22-25 ° C ). ( 2 ) Add the same volume of firefly luciferase working solution with the medium to the culture plate and mix well. ( 3 ) Incubation at room temperature for 5 min. Note : The incubation time can be adjusted according to cell type and cell number. ( 4 ) The values were read by multifunctional microplate reader or chemiluminescence instrument ( instrument parameters : the determination time was 10 s, the determination interval was 2 s ).Matters needing attention:1. please centrifuge the product to the bottom of the tube immediately before use, and then conduct subsequent experiments. 2. the strongest wavelength of bioluminescence catalyzed by firefly luciferase is 560 nm. 3. to prevent interference between holes, it is recommended to use white opaque orifice plate.Recommendation:Component B is recommended to use sterile water in advance to configure 2 mg / mL storage solution, A component and B component configured as storage solution, and small batch packaging according to the experimental requirements. The detection working fluid is recommended to be used now to avoid repeated freezing and thawing. Component:One-Step Firefly Luciferase Assay Buffer;D-Luciferin Scope of application:Mainly used for ADCC detection... Read More | R669988 Component 50T Storage R669988A DNase I 1000 U -20℃. Avoid freeze/thaw cycle. R669988B 10×Reaction Buffer 1000 µL -20℃. Avoid freeze/thaw cycle. R669988C Buffer RL 35 mL RT R669988D Buffer RLC 35 mL RT R669988E Buffer RW1 40 mL RT R669988F Buffer RW2 (concentrate) 11 mL R669988 Component 50T Storage R669988A DNase I 1000 U -20℃. Avoid freeze/thaw cycle. R669988B 10×Reaction Buffer 1000 µL -20℃. Avoid freeze/thaw cycle. R669988C Buffer RL 35 mL RT R669988D Buffer RLC 35 mL RT R669988E Buffer RW1 40 mL RT R669988F Buffer RW2 (concentrate) 11 mL RT R669988G RNase-Free Water 10 mL RT R669988H Spin Columns FL with Collection Tubes 50 sets RT R669988I Spin Columns RM with Collection Tubes 50 sets RT R669988J RNase-Free Centrifuge Tubes (1.5 mL) 50 EA RTProductsThis kit is used for the extraction and purification of high-quality total RNA from a variety of plants, and is also suitable for the extraction of fungal mycelial RNA. The unique separation column is used for homogenization and filtration of high viscosity plant or fungal lysates, while the silicon matrix membrane is used to adsorb the RNA for purification, so that various contaminants, such as polysaccharides, are effectively removed by washing, and the eluted RNA can be directly used in various downstream experiments. The molecular weight of RNA extracted by this kit is more than 200 bases, with high purity and almost no DNA residue. For RNA experiments that are very sensitive to trace DNA, the residual DNA can be removed by digestion on a column using RNase-free DNase. The extracted RNA can be used in Northern Blot, Dot Blot, RT-PCR and in vitro translation experiments.Self-contained reagents: β-mercaptoethanol, anhydrous ethanol (freshly opened or for RNA extraction).Pre-experiment Preparation and Important Notes1. To prevent RNase contamination, attention should be paid to the following aspects:1) Use RNase-free plastics and tips to avoid cross-contamination.2) RNase-free water should be used to prepare the solution.(3) Operators wear disposable masks and gloves, and change gloves diligently during the experiment.2. To prevent RNase contamination, attention should be paid to the following aspects:1) Use RNase-free plastics and tips to avoid cross-contamination.(2) Glassware should be dry-roasted at 180°C for 4 hours before use, and plasticware can be soaked in 0.5M NaOH for 10 minutes, rinsed thoroughly with water and autoclaved.3) RNase-free water should be used to prepare the solution.(4) Operators wear disposable masks and gloves, and change gloves diligently during the experiment.3. Avoid repeated freezing and thawing of the extracted samples, otherwise it will affect the amount and quality of RNA extraction.4. Please add β-mercaptoethanol to Buffer RL before use, add 10µl of β-mercaptoethanol to 1ml of Buffer RL, it can be stored for 1 month at room temperature. Buffer RL with β-mercaptoethanol can be stored at room temperature for 1 month. β-mercaptoethanol is not required for use of Buffer RLC.5. Anhydrous ethanol should be added to Buffer RW2 before first use according to the instructions on the reagent bottle label.6. If precipitation occurs in Buffer RL and Buffer RLC, heat to dissolve and leave at room temperature.7. All centrifugation steps are carried out at room temperature and all steps are performed quickly. Procedure1. 50-100 mg of plant tissue is quickly ground to a powder in liquid nitrogen and added to 600 µl of Buffer RL (check for addition of β-mercaptoethanol before use) or Buffer RLC. vortexing and oscillating to allow for adequate lysis.Note: 1) The main component of Buffer RL is guanidine isothiocyanate, which is suitable for lysis of most plant tissues. However, in some plant tissues (e.g. endosperm of corn), due to the special secondary metabolites, guanidine isothiocyanate causes precipitation of the sample, resulting in poor RNA extraction, in this case, Buffer RLC can be added instead of Buffer RL.2) Incubation at 56°C for 1-3 minutes helps tissue lysis, but do not incubate at high temperatures for plants with high starch content.2. Transfer all the liquid obtained in step 1 to an adsorption column (Spin Columns FL) that has been loaded into a collection tube, centrifuge at 12,000 rpm (~13,400 x g) for 2 minutes, and transfer the supernatant from the collection tube to a new centrifuge tube (supplied).Note: 1) The tip of the tip of the gun can be cut off when aspirating liquids to facilitate sampling.2) Spin Columns FL removes most of the debris, but a small portion will still flow out and a precipitate will form in the collection tube after centrifugation, so be careful to avoid aspirating the precipitate when proceeding to the next step.3. Add 0.5 times the volume of anhydrous ethanol to the clean lysate obtained in step 2 and mix rapidly.Note: Precipitation may occur upon addition of ethanol, but does not affect subsequent tests.4. Transfer the solution obtained in the previous step to the Spin Columns RM in the collection tube. If it is not possible to add all of the solution to the column at one time, centrifuge the column at 12,000 rpm for 15 seconds in two batches, discard the waste solution and put the column back into the collection tube.5. Add 350 µl Buffer RW1 to the adsorbent column, centrifuge at 12,000 rpm for 1 min, discard the waste liquid and put the adsorbent column back into the collection tube.6. Preparation of DNase I mixture: Take 52µl of RNase-Free Water, add 8µl of 10×Reaction Buffer and 20µl of DNase I (1U/µl) to it, mix well, and make a final volume of 80µl of reaction solution.7. Add 80µl of DNase I mixture directly to the adsorption column and incubate at 20-30°C for 15 minutes.8. Add 350 µl of Buffer RW1 to the adsorption column, centrifuge at 12,000 rpm for 1 minute, discard the waste liquid and put the column back into the collection tube.9. Add 500 µl of Buffer RW2 to the column (check that anhydrous ethanol is added before use), centrifuge at 12,000 rpm for 15 seconds, and discard the waste solution.10. Repeat step 9.11. Place the adsorbent column back into the collection tube, centrifuge at 12,000 rpm for 1 minute, and allow the column to come to room temperature for a few minutes to thoroughly dry out the anhydrous ethanol in the adsorbent column.Note: The purpose of this step is to remove residual ethanol from the adsorption column; ethanol residue can interfere with subsequent enzymatic reactions (zymography, PCR, etc.).12. Load the adsorption column into a new centrifuge tube, add 30-50 µl of RNase-Free Water to the middle of the adsorbent membrane, leave it at room temperature for 1 minute, centrifuge at 12,000 rpm for 1 minute, and store the resulting RNA solution at -70°C to prevent degradation.Note: 1) The volume of RNase-Free Water should not be less than 30 µl, too small volume affects the recovery rate.2) If you want to increase the RNA yield, repeat step 12 with 30-50 µl of fresh RNase-Free Water.3) If the RNA concentration is to be increased, the resulting solution can be reintroduced into the adsorption column and step 12 repeated... Read More |