Oncology

Oncology

Reagents for the study of tumor-associated ion channels, receptors, and other membrane-protein targets.

In-house made antibodies, peptides, toxins, and small molecules for membrane proteins implicated in cancer signaling and cell-state changes. All reagents are validated using multiple approaches, such as immunohistochemistry (IHC), immunocytochemistry (ICC), western blot (WB), flow cytometry, or functional assays, supporting modulation or detection of channel and receptor activity. 

 

FAQs

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    1. Reagents are shipped at room temperature in a stable lyophilized form. To spin down all the powder to the bottom of the vial, centrifuge vials (10,000 x g, 5 minutes) before adding any solvent.
      Note: The lyophilizate may be difficult to visualize in the vial.
    2. Follow product-specific instructions for selecting the preferred solvent solution**.Add your solvent directly to the centrifuged vial and tap on it to dissolve the lyophilized reagent.
    3. Tilt and gently roll the liquid over the walls of the vial.
      Important! For toxins and peptides – avoid vigorous vortexing (up to 3 seconds of light vortexing is enough). For neurotrophins, pro-neurotrophins, and growth factors – we recommend completely avoiding vortex.
    4. Spin down and divide the solution into single-use aliquots.Store the aliquots at -20°C.
    5. Before use, thaw the vial and dilute the reagent in working buffer.

    **Venom toxins are usually soluble in pure water (e.g., double-distilled water (ddH2O)) at high micromolar concentrations (0.1–1 mM). You can typically reconstitute the lyophilized product in any aqueous buffer. Yet, we highly recommend preparing a stock solution in pure water, unless stated otherwise in the product datasheetFor neurotrophins, pro-neurotrophins, and growth factors, our general recommendation is to reconstitute with sterile water at a concentration of 0.01–0.1 mg/mL as a stock solution. You can further dilute the stock solution as needed.

    Note: We recommend preparing fresh working buffers before each use.
    Note:
    Avoid multiple freeze-thaw cycles to maintain biological activity.
    Note:
    Avoid heating peptides/proteins. Work at ambient room temperature and no higher than 37oC.

  • The blocking peptide is the antigen we use for immunization during antibody generation so that we can create an antigen-specific antibody. You can use this blocking peptide as a negative control alongside other controls in an immunoassay to give some insight into antibody specificity, but not selectivity.

    It’s important to note that the blocking peptide is not an effective control for use with live cells. If you need a control for flow cytometry, we recommend an isotype antibody control instead.

    For more details, see our guide to blocking peptides.

  • We carefully choose the epitope for immunization, taking into account two main parameters: immunogenicity and specificity of the epitope.

    Before immunization, we run a search to verify that the chosen epitope has maximum homology with other species and minimum homology among members of the same family or other proteins. After immunization and collection of sera, the antibodies are affinity-purified on immobilized antigens (the injected peptides).

    This means you shouldn’t have to worry about your antibody cross-reacting with close members of the same protein family.

  • Affinity-purified rabbit polyclonal antibodies are mainly IgGs.

Category: Cancer Biology
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