Protein microarrays are emerging as one of the most active areas in biotechnology today. Steady advances are overcoming initial skepticism as to their feasibility and utility. Industry sources project ...
Researchers in the laboratory of R. Graham Cooks at Purdue University have developed a mass spectrometry-based method of creating protein arrays. The technique, known as ion soft-landing, selects ...
Reverse phase protein array is a high-throughput technology that performs protein assays on thousands of samples simultaneously, including tissue and cell lysates, serum, plasma or other body fluids.
Drug development is such a formidable challenge that, some believe, it can only be undertaken effectively by big pharma. Time-consuming and expensive, the classic approach has been to screen vast ...
Reverse phase protein array is a high-throughput technology that performs protein assays on thousands of samples simultaneously, including tissue and cell lysates, serum, plasma or other body fluids.
Protein arrays are a relatively new technique for studying protein-protein interactions and profiling antibody binding and specificity, and in the past year a number of companies have released premade ...
BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sengenics announced the launch of a new autoantibody profiling service – the ‘Pan-Autoimmune Protein Array 1.0’ – to expedite the identification and quantitation of ...
Scientists at Northwestern University have developed a new detection technology on the nanometer scale that could lead to the next generation of proteomic arrays and new methods for diagnosing ...
BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sengenics today announced the commercial launch of the i-Ome® Protein Array Kit. The i-Ome® Protein Array Kit contains slide-based, high density protein microarrays, comprised ...
(Nanowerk News) A groundbreaking study has shed new light on the astonishing diversity of protein structures and their folds in nature. Researchers set out to reveal the extent to which nature has ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results