Millipore Issues New Protein Research Applications Guide

13 Jan 2006

Product news

Millipore today announced the availability of the newest edition of its Protein Research Applications Guide, a publication that features the latest tools for purifying, concentrating and identifying protein samples.

Millipore’s ultrafiltration membranes, blotting membranes, reagents and disposable devices for protein sample preparation enable researchers to get the most from their chromatography, electrophoresis and mass spectrometry systems.

This guide now includes:

  • The most complete range of ultrafiltration products for preparing protein samples at almost any volume used in the laboratory, from as small as <0.5 µL up to 10 liters
  • An expanded selection of tangential flow filtration (TFF) devices, such as Pellicon® XL-50, Prep/Scale® and Pellicon 2 systems
  • Additional information on Milli-Q® high purity water systems specifically designed for critical life science applications
  • New Immobilon™ Western HRP and AP chemiluminescent substrates that provide broad detection sensitivity and reduce antibody consumption two- to five-fold compared with traditional reagents
  • New Centricon® Plus-70 Centrifugal Filters for processing up to 70 mL, as well as the complete line of Amicon® Centrifugal filters
  • New Immobilon-FL Transfer Membrane, which is the first blotting membrane optimized for western detection using fluorescence

For more information, please contact Millipore Technical Service.

Links

Tags

ProteomicsProteomics is the systemic bioinformatics study of proteins and amino acids, including their structure, size, function and identification. Tools used in proteomics include chromatography, blotting and gels, protein arrays, mass spectrometry and ELISA and associated analysis software. Analyzers and proteomic systems should be sensitive, high resolution, fast and may be automated for high-throughput.Protein PurificationProtein purification is a vital step in drug discovery, therapeutics, biotech and life science research. The purification process typically involves subcellular or membrane protein extraction with cell lysis kits, separation of proteins from cell debris by filtration or spin columns, and the isolation of proteins of interest from other proteins and impurities with affinity purification (including fusion protein tags and antibody binding proteins A, G and L), immunoprecipitation or chromatographic methods, such as ion exchange, size exclusion and immobilized metal affinity chromatography. All purification methods come in multiple formats for your laboratory needs, including agarose or magnetic beads, resins, columns and filter plates. Find the best protein purification equipment in our peer-reviewed product directory: compare products, check customer reviews and receive pricing direct from manufacturers.
Millipore Issues New Protein Research Applications Guide