New screening method identifies potential compounds to combat cancer
The new screening technique may enable development of novel combination-immunotherapy regimens against cancers and persistent infections.
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The new screening technique may enable development of novel combination-immunotherapy regimens against cancers and persistent infections.
A novel peptide has been discovered that attacks gram negative bacteria at a previously unknown site of action which presents a promising lead substance for the development of a new antibiotic.
From small-scale stem cell production to large-scale hiPSC-based drug development: The flexibility of stirred-tank bioreactors.
The CyBio FeliX pipetting system was used to perform all liquid handling steps of the library preparation workflow for personal genome analysis.
Improve the reproducibility of the real-time results in 384 well format with the application of a qPCR using a pipetting robot & standardized sample setup.
Researchers have created a new high-throughput screening system which could identify new drugs by focusing on nucleotide metabolism.
Investigation of thermal protein stability in high throughput using the application of thermal shift assay using SYPRO ® Orange in 96 well format.
Detection of four pathogens of mastitis diseases using qTOWER³ in combination with extraction and detection systems for DNA diagnostics.
Combining automated nucleic acid extraction, photometry and qPCR for easy-to-use and highly sensitive species analysis of cheese.
SmartExtraction significantly simplifies the entire automated workflow of DNA extraction.
Challenge: One touch imaging of multiple proteins on the same blot with NIR fluorescent tags. Solution? Automated imaging with the UVP ChemStudio.
Proper signal visualization, detection, and quantification are paramount to the acquisition of accurate and reproducible data...
A new study could pave the way for developing a viable therapy for Charcot-Marie-Tooth patients affected by TyrRS mutations.
Challenge: Non-invasive imaging of a patient-derived orthotropic mouse model of pancreatic cancer expressing GFP. The solution? In vivo imaging.
In vivo imaging has been an indispensable and powerful tool in biomedical research, enabling a number of significant breakthrough discoveries.