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micro micro
wrote...
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10 years ago
When studying the proteome of an organism / microbe very often protein extract is electrophoresed and then western blotting is performed with specific antibodies to a particular protein of interest. If the identity of a protein band after electrophoresis is not known (i.e. the actual protein is not known), how would you quantify the volume if you cannot perform western blot...since you don't know what protein it is and hence don't know what antibodies to use?
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wrote...
Staff Member
Educator
10 years ago
HI micro

I would use a more concentrated antibody if there is not enough protein. Not sure I'm understanding this.
Mastering in Nutritional Biology
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micro Author
wrote...
10 years ago
Don't think you understood me. My question is that if you don't know what the proteins are, how do you measure their quantity by antibodies after western blotting? To use antibodies, you need to know what your antigen (in this case protein) is.
wrote...
Staff Member
Educator
10 years ago
Interesting question. Wouldn't there be an infinite number of antigens possible?
Mastering in Nutritional Biology
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