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Bradford Protein Assay (BA0168)

SKU:
BA0168
Product Type:
Assay
Instrument:
Microplate Reader
Sample Type:
Biological Food, Agriculture
Research Area:
Amino Acid and Protein
€479
Frequently bought together:

Description

ELISA Kit Technical ManualMSDS

Description

Bradford Protein Assay is based on an improved Coomassie Blue G method. The dye forms a blue complex specifically with protein, and the intensity of color, measured at 595nm, is directly proportional to the protein concentration in the sample. The optimized formulation substantially reduces interference by substances in the raw samples and exhibits increased sensitivity towards peptides.

Applications

For quantitative determination of total protein.

Key Features

  • Sensitive and accurate. Use 10 mL samples. Detection range 0.06 - 1.0 mg /mL protein in 96-well plate assay.
  • Simple and high-throughput. The "mix-and-read" procedure involves addition of a single working reagent and reading the optical density. Can be readily automated as a high-throughput assay in 96-well plates for thousands of samples per day.
  • Low interference. Glucose, Tris, vitamins, and amino acids, DNA, RNA, salts, EDTA (<12 mM), phenol (<50 mM), urea (<0.6 M), Triton (<0.1%) and SDS (<0.1% SDS) do not interfere in the assay.
  • Versatility: assays can be executed in 96-well plate or cuvet.

Data Sheet

IncludesReagent: 20 mL 5 x concentrate Protein standard: 1 mL 1.0 mg/mL BSA
Kit RequiresPipeting devices and accessories
Method of DetectionOD595nm (Bradford)
Detection Limit60 ug/mL
SamplesBiological, food, agriculture etc
SpeciesAll
Protocol Length2 min
Size500 tests
StorageStore the reagent at 4°C and standard at -20°C
Shelf Life12 months

More Details

The protein is known as the "building blocks of life" and is one of the most important macromolecules in life science. Proteins are polypeptides made up of amino acids and play various key roles in all aspects of biology. Protein quantitation is a very common practice for life scientists. Simple, direct and automation-ready procedures for measuring protein concentration are very desirable.