Tracey Harshberger, Global Product Manager for Antibodies, shares how Sigma Life Science has made finding antibodies easy!
Speaker: Tracey Harshberger, Global Product Manager for Antibodies
Published: Thursday, 27 January, 2011
An antibody-based proteomics strategy is applied to combine high-throughput generation of mono-specific antibodies (Prestige Antibodies®) with protein profiling in human tissues and cells using immunohistochemistry on cell and tissue microarrays (TMAs). The webinar covers the development and validation of Prestige Antibodies® and explores the use of these antibodies in the search and characterization of biomarkers related to cancer.
Speaker: Dr. Fredrik Ponten, Professor, Uppsala University and Vice-program Director, Human Protein Atlas
Published: Tuesday, 15 June, 2010
Kyle Brueggeman, Product Manager, explains the expansion of the Your Favorite Gene Web site. We've added a biologically relevant literature search, new gene regulation and variation viewers, expression study results, clinical trials, detailed disease relationships, and biochemical compound interactions related to your gene of interest. Spend less time searching multiple sites and find it all in YFG. See what's new!
Published: Thursday, 29 April, 2010
We imagine Bio began for some Neanderthals when their forkhead domain of FOXP2 first mutated. This change impacted the transcription factor it coded, and the rest is history. Of course it is sensational to say FOXP2 is the speech gene, or that one or two mutations lead to the development of speech, so we’ve made this sensational video to honor the idea. Hopefully scientists will soon understand more about the cascade of changes that came from this mutation, the difference they made in neural connectivity, and all the physical changes that came before and after. In the meantime, enjoy our homage to those mullets, I mean mutants, who could first speak.
Published: Thursday, 29 April, 2010
The Protein Atlas contains expression profiles and sub-cellular localization for close to 7000 proteins corresponding to ~33% of the human genome. This introduction video will show you how to make best use of the Protein Atlas in your research.
Published: Monday, 29 March, 2010