TransGen Biotech

 

TransGen Biotech, Inc. is a researcher, developer, manufacturer and distributor of more than 200 molecular and cellular biology products and kits for life science research and molecular diagnostics. In 2001, the company was founded by three scientists with a mission to produce innovative and cost-effective products for life science research. 

Currently, their products cover: plasmid based DNA markers, high efficiency chemically competent cells, 5 minutes PCR product cloning and expression vectors, a variety of PCR enzymes and supermix, RNase H deficient and high temperature RT enzymes, qPCR and qRT-PCR supermix, the highest efficiency mutagenesis kits, high quality nucleic acid extraction and purification kits, unstained and prestained protein markers, western blot markers, and protein purification resins, cell culture and transfection reagents, antibodies. 
 
Read more : 

  

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                     

Cell Biology 

 

 

     Mycoplasma Detection Cell Biology 

 

Natural Killer Cell Research Solution 

 

EasyPure® Fast Cell RNA Kit

 

 

Cell and Tissue Culture

 

 

TransScript® 5'/3' Race Kit

 

 

 

 

 

 

                 

Molecular Diagnostic Products

 

 

 

PerfectStart® Fast Green qPCR SuperMix

 

 

PerfectStart® II Probe qPCR SuperMix UDG

 

 

Reagent Solutions for Molecular Diagnosis

 

 

TransScript® II Multiplex Probe One-Step qRT-PCR SuperMix UDG

 

 
 

Watch the videos: 

 

  

 
 

 
             

TS-32 Automated Nucleic Acid Extractors

 

 

 

 

How to use SARS-CoV-2 Nucleic Acid

Detection Kit (Multiplex Real Time RT-PCR)

 

 

 

TransGen webinar The basics of Quantitative

Polymerase Chain Reaction (qPCR)

 

 

 

Cell Culture: The basic essentials you need to know
 

 

 

 
 

 
             

TransGen Webinar for NGS Products

 

TransGen-Plasmid Extraction

 

TransGen's Vlog

 

TSI 100 Nucleic Acid Gel Imaging System

 
 
 
Affinity resins for histidine tagged proteins

Affinity resins for histidine tagged proteins

Immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (IMAC) technology was introduced by Porath et al (1975). Certain amino acids such as histidine, tryptophan, cysteine and tyrosine can act as electron donors on the surface of the protein and bind reversibly to a transition metal ion. IMAC purification utilizes this metal ion binding by coupling a chelating group (such as Nitrilotriacetic Acid (NTA) or Iminodiacetic Acid (IDA)) to a stable chromatographic resin (such as Agarose). Transition metal ions such as Ni2+, Co2+, Cu2+, or Zn2+ (see Porath and Olin, 1983; Porath, 1988; Sulkowski, 1989) can then be loaded and immobilised onto the chelating group enabling high affinity binding, in the majority of cases this is via an 6-8x polyhistidinetag engineered at the N- or C-terminus of a recombinant protein (Kd-10-13 at pH 8.0). Nickel and Cobalt are the most widely used metal ions as they confer the highest affinity (Ni2+>Co2+) with the highest specificity (Co2+>Ni2+) for the IMAC tags.
The simplicity of IMAC technology is extremely attractive as it lends itself to a bind-washelute mode of operation if the appropriate buffer formulations are selected. IMAC purification can also be achieved using samples without any prior treatment (e.g. buffer exchange steps). The use of metal chelate affinity is widespread for the selective adsorption of engineered recombinant proteins and has largely superseded non-affinity methods of chromatography for purifying recombinant proteins.