Cutting membrane after transfer
#16
Posted 23 September 2009 - 12:37 PM
There is a simplest way to cat membrane (PVDF) directly on protein wells. I do this always after transfer. I do semi-dry transfer and after that transfer when you take the membrane and let them little dry you will be able to seen the all protein on membrane without any staining. But you mast be very careful and cat mambran quick. (Not to let them dry).
#17
Posted 25 September 2009 - 03:37 AM
yobou, on Jun 15 2009, 07:33 AM, said:
bob1, on Apr 3 2009, 08:53 AM, said:
Dr Teeth, on Apr 2 2009, 06:10 AM, said:
Many journals now ask for a full picture of the blot to be included in supplementary information, to make sure that the blot is as the authors said it is.
my lab publishs in journals like cancer research, oncogene, mol cancer ther, mol cancer res, carcinogenesis, cancer science and we were never asked to show the whole image of the blot or gel. I did not expect that peer review means the authors are assumed to fabricate the results!!! but rather is concerned with the validity of conclusions with respect to experimental design
Nature Cell Biology ask for the whole blot. We recently published there and we had to provide almost every blot we showed in the manuscript
Edited by laurequillo, 25 September 2009 - 03:37 AM.
"This is SPARTA!"
"I´m the goddamn batman"
#18
Posted 25 September 2009 - 07:27 AM
laurequillo, on Sep 25 2009, 01:37 PM, said:
yobou, on Jun 15 2009, 07:33 AM, said:
bob1, on Apr 3 2009, 08:53 AM, said:
Dr Teeth, on Apr 2 2009, 06:10 AM, said:
Many journals now ask for a full picture of the blot to be included in supplementary information, to make sure that the blot is as the authors said it is.
my lab publishs in journals like cancer research, oncogene, mol cancer ther, mol cancer res, carcinogenesis, cancer science and we were never asked to show the whole image of the blot or gel. I did not expect that peer review means the authors are assumed to fabricate the results!!! but rather is concerned with the validity of conclusions with respect to experimental design
Nature Cell Biology ask for the whole blot. We recently published there and we had to provide almost every blot we showed in the manuscript
Once I have tried an instrument from BioRad Mini-PROTEAN II Multiscreen Apparatus (http://www.bio-rad.c...36-b36876cad466) which lets you to apply many different primary or secondary antibodies on a membrane with out cutting it it also need very low amount of antibodies.If it is possible you can also try this apparatus.
#19
Posted 18 November 2009 - 08:45 AM
Dr Teeth, on Apr 2 2009, 07:10 AM, said:
Why don't you just incubate the whole blot with all the antibodies simutaeously, as long as you know the apropiate concentrations of each antibody and you know which band corresponds to each antibody.
#20
Posted 18 November 2009 - 08:52 AM
medchemgirl, on May 20 2009, 12:30 PM, said:
Bomber, on Apr 2 2009, 02:03 AM, said:
I usually do this rather than stripping the membrane. Just stain with ponceau red to check how the lanes look and cut accordingly with a regular scissor.
In case I use an antibody the very first time I do not cut the membrane but try to see how specific it works by offering the complete membrane and not only the piece of expected molecular weight.
To wash the ponceau from the membrane plain water or buffer, to remove it from the proteins 0,1M NaOH.
If you block with proteins, they usually take the ponceau with'em.
Coomassie is seen as an irreversible stain, thus it may impair antibody binding.
You may also let the membrane dry and the insert it in 20% ethanol, the membrane will turn translucent where proteins are (do it over a dark sourface or transilluminator).
#21
Posted 24 January 2010 - 12:58 PM
As long as you know your antibodies are specific, I don't see anything wrong with this.
People who stain the whole blot only show a strip anyway for a publication figure.
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#22
Posted 19 February 2010 - 08:25 AM
#24
Posted 05 December 2011 - 04:35 PM
#25
Posted 05 December 2011 - 06:08 PM
acquire, on 05 December 2011 - 04:35 PM, said:
I heard stripping would remove some proteins as well, so would it be advisable to reprobe similar sized proteins (e.g. both at 60kD)?
#26
Posted 27 February 2012 - 03:16 PM
laurequillo, on 25 September 2009 - 03:37 AM, said:
yobou, on Jun 15 2009, 07:33 AM, said:
bob1, on Apr 3 2009, 08:53 AM, said:
Dr Teeth, on Apr 2 2009, 06:10 AM, said:
Many journals now ask for a full picture of the blot to be included in supplementary information, to make sure that the blot is as the authors said it is.
my lab publishs in journals like cancer research, oncogene, mol cancer ther, mol cancer res, carcinogenesis, cancer science and we were never asked to show the whole image of the blot or gel. I did not expect that peer review means the authors are assumed to fabricate the results!!! but rather is concerned with the validity of conclusions with respect to experimental design
Nature Cell Biology ask for the whole blot. We recently published there and we had to provide almost every blot we showed in the manuscript
#27
Posted 27 February 2012 - 03:17 PM
acquire, on 05 December 2011 - 04:35 PM, said:
#28
Posted 05 May 2012 - 06:59 PM
Some pictures would help or descriptive language.
I can think of it like this:
Say I have 6 lanes:
| Seeblue plus 2| sample | sample | sample | sample | sample |
It's the same sample. Seeblue plus 2. Let's say I do a 12% gel, and I run it until the bands space out pretty well for me to probe for the proteins.
Let's say that I'm testing for actin, amyloid precursor protein, presenilin-1, beta-catenin, and gamma-secretase (so, five different proteins).
Afterward, I take apart the gel, blot it onto nitrocellulose paper, and check it with ponceau S to see if I have bands.
I use PBST to wash off the Ponceau S, and then...
Ok, so let me see if I understand what all of you are talking about...
Then, what I do, is I cut paralell to the direction the bands have sorted out by length in each of their respective lanes, without cutting through the protein lanes.
And then I have the opportunity to place each strip with its respective protein bands into its own plastic bag with antibody.
Afterward, I piece everything back together in a film casette, bring it to the film room, and attempt to develop.
Now, that sounds like a great idea, but I would definitely would have to wait different time intervals for the bands to appear. And wouldn't there be some over-exposure? For instance, the actin band would get super dark over time, right? Maybe messing with the film?
Edited by Genecks, 05 May 2012 - 07:01 PM.
#29
Posted 07 May 2012 - 11:07 AM
genius does what it must
i do what i get paid to do




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