Can I prepare my protein sample with the reducing agent and store it for future use?
DTT is not stable, so it must be added and the reduction performed just prior to loading your samples.
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My LDS or SDS sample buffer precipitates when stored at 4 degrees C. Can I warm it up? Can I store it at room temperature?
Precipitation of the LDS or SDS at 4 degrees C is normal. Bring the buffer to room temperature and mix until the LDS/SDS goes into solution. If you do not want to wait for it to dissolve, you can store the sample buffer at room temperature.
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How are Bolt gels different than NuPAGE gels?
While they are both Bis-Tris based gels, the chemistries are very different since Bolt gels are optimized for western blotting. Another key difference is the wedge well design of the Bolt gels, which allows larger sample volumes to be loaded.
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What is the advantage of NuPAGE Gels over regular Tris-Glycine gels?
The neutral operating pH of the NuPAGE Gels and buffers provides following advantages over the Laemmli system:
-Longer shelf life of 8-12 months due to improved gel stability
-Improved protein stability during electrophoresis at neutral pH resulting in sharper band resolution and accurate results (Moos et al, 1998)
-Complete reduction of disulfides under mild heating conditions (70 degrees C for 10 min) and absence of cleavage of asp-pro bonds using the NuPAGE LDS Sample buffer (pH > 7.0 at 70 degrees C)
-Reduced state of the proteins maintained during electrophoresis and blotting of the proteins by the NuPAGE Antioxidant
Please refer to the following paper: Moos M Jr, Nguyen NY, Liu TY (1988) Reproducible High Yield Sequencing of Proteins Electrophoretically Separated and Transferred to an Inert Support. J Biol Chem 263:6005-6008.
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How do I perform a semi-dry transfer of Tris-Glycine gels?
If using Invitrogen Semi-Dry Blotter (Cat. No. SD1000), follow instructions in the manual for it.
Here is the transfer protocol optimized for the Bio-Rad Semi-Dry Transfer Unit. NuPAGE transfer buffer can be used for Tris-Glycine gels.
1) Working transfer buffer: 10% methanol, 1:1,000 Antioxidant in 2X NuPAGE transfer buffer (Bis-Tris 50 mM and Bicine 50 mM). If you need to prepare 100 mL of the working buffer from the NuPAGE 20X Transfer Buffer (Cat. No. NP0006), mix the following: 10 mL of 20X transfer buffer, 10 mL of MeOH, 100 µL of Antioxidant, 80 mL of DI H2O.
2) Filter papers: The transfer buffer-soaked filter papers of the sandwich are the only reservoir in the Semi-Dry Transfer Cell. If Invitrogen pre-cut membrane/filter sandwiches are used, at least 2 extra filter papers (0.4 mm/filter in thickness) on each side of the gel (or membrane) are required. When assembling one gel/membrane sandwich, presoak 6 Invitrogen filter papers (or 2 thicker filter papers) and 1 membrane in working transfer buffer (prepared in step 1) and sandwich them on the top of the anode plate as follows: filter paper--filter paper--filter paper--membrane--gel--filter paper--filter paper--filter paper
3) Blotting conditions: We found 15 V for 15-30 min is optimal for NuPAGE transfer buffer in the Bio-Rad Semi-Dry Transfer Cell. Semi-dry transfer units from other manufacturers should be used according to unit's instructions.
4) For transfer of large proteins (100 kD or larger), pre-equilibrate the gel with 0.02-0.04% SDS in 2X transfer buffer without methanol for 10 min before assembling the sandwich. Please note that transferring Tris-Glycine gels using NuPAGE transfer buffer in the Bio-Rad Trans-Blot SD Semi-Dry Transfer Cell may be less efficient than using Tris-Glycine transfer buffer (Cat. No. LC3675) in the XCell II blot module (semi-wet).
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