On-demand webinar: An AI-based approach to phenotypic characterisation of neuronal cells
Evaluation of neurotoxicity effects is an active area of investigation in drug discovery and disease modeling.
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Evaluation of neurotoxicity effects is an active area of investigation in drug discovery and disease modeling.
This whitepaper overviews use of Advanced Flow Cytometry to accelerate antibody screening and characterisation and reveal deeper biological insights.
This whitepaper describes several live-cell phenotypic analyses suitable for the characterisation of astroglia cells.
Accelerate the discovery process of new drugs and targets with a better understanding of the metabolome and lipidome during drug development.
The cell painting assay uses up to six fluorescent dyes to label and visualize a variety of subcellular structures at the single cell level.
The latest edition of the live-cell analysis handbook is a companion guide for live-cell analysis users. Includes discussion of live-cell analysis.
MIT researchers have shown that a combination of three drugs can eliminate pancreatic tumours in mice, possibly leading to new therapies.
This whitepaper overviews the importance of understanding T Cell Biology to build better therapeutics, demonstrates use of advanced flow cytometry.
30 July 2021 | By Bio-Techne
Watch this on-demand webinar and learn about robust technologies for nanobody drug discovery.
Depletion of ATP due to viral-induced CPE leads to a reduction in luminescence signal, enabling quantitation of viral-induced CPE in host cells.
28 July 2021 | By Sartorius AG
In this on-demand webinar, our expert illustrates the utility of GPCR libraries and explains how to discover potent functional antibodies against multiple GPCR targets.
An exosome formulation has been created to deliver vascular endothelial-growth factor (VEGF) antibodies for choroidal neovascularisation therapy in models.
Scientists have developed a “llama nanobody” that is capable of chasing out human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) so it is detected by the immune system.
A new “atlas” has been created in the US that charts how 152 different antibodies attack the SARS-CoV-2 Spike protein.
In this article, Dr Rajasree Kalagiri explains research into the use of monoclonal antibodies for the differential recognition of phosphohistidine-containing peptides.