SNARE-Mediated Membrane Fusion and dPEG®, Part 1

Contact Us Part 1: A Reduced SNARE Model for Membrane Fusion The cells of all living things depend on membrane Read More...

SNARE-Mediated Membrane Fusion and dPEG®, Part 2

Contact Us Part 2: Controlling Liposome Fusion Using SNARE Protein Mimics For Part 1 of this three-part series, click here. For Read More...

SNARE-Mediated Membrane Fusion and dPEG®, Part 3

Contact Us Part 3: Modeling Membrane Fusion with SNARE Protein Analogs   Click the links for Part 1 and Part 2 of this three-part Read More...

Amphotericin B+dPEG®: Water-Soluble, Less Toxic, Potent

Contact Us About Amphotericin B Figure 1: Structure of Amphotericin B. Image used by permission from J. Med. Chem. (2016), 59, Read More...

Knockout vs. Knockdown

Contact us In a survey conducted by Nature, 90% of respondents agreed that there was a reproducibility crisis in biological Read More...

Western blotting guide: Part 2, Protein separation by SDS-PAGE

Contact Us Once prepared, the sample proteins are separated by PAGE (polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis), which may be performed under native Read More...

Western blotting guide: Part 1, Introduction and Sample Preparation

Contact Us In 1979, Towbin et al. first detailed the process of immunoblotting – the separation of proteins from a Read More...

Affinity Vs Avidity

Contact Us Affinity and avidity are terms used to describe the strength of the bond between an antibody and its Read More...

Immunoglossary

Contact Us Antibodies are such critical reagents for scientific research that a unique language has been coined relating to them. Here, we’ve Read More...

Click Chemistry - Jena Bioscience

Click Chemistry

Click Chemistry[1] describes pairs of functional groups that rapidly and selectively react (“click”) with each other under mild, aqueous conditions. The Read More...

Click Reagents by Chemistry

Contact Us Click Chemistry[1] describes pairs of functional groups that rapidly and selectively react (“click”) with each other under mild, aqueous Read More...

Click Reagents by Application

Contact Us Click Chemistry[1] describes pairs of functional groups that rapidly and selectively react ("click") with each other under mild, aqueous Read More...