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There is no prescribed route to follow to arrive at a new idea. You have to make the intuitive leap. But the difference is that once you've made the intuitive leap you have to justify it by filling in the intermediate steps. In my case, it often happens that I have an idea, but then I try to fill in the intermediate steps and find that they don't work, so I have to give it up. ~Stephen W. Hawking
Protocols and information related to epitope mapping antibodies.
| Epitope Mapping by Competition Assay Protocol - http://www.cshprotocols.org/cgi/content/extract/2006/18/pdb.prot4277 The simplest way to determine whether two monoclonal antibodies bind to distinct sites on a protein antigen is to carry out a competition assay. The assay can be used with antibodies that bind both conformational and linear epitopes, and it is most useful in the analysis of monoclonal antibody specificity because polyclonal sera typically recognize multiple different epitopes. - [Read Epitope Mapping by Competition Assay Protocol] |
| Epitope Mapping Using Synthetic Biotin-Labeled Peptides Protocol - http://www.cshprotocols.org/cgi/content/extract/2006/18/pdb.prot4278 A set of overlapping synthetic peptides is synthesized, each corresponding to a small segment of the linear sequence of a protein antigen and arrayed on a solid phase. The panel of solid-phase peptides is then probed with a test antibody, and bound antibody is detected using an enzyme-labeled secondary antibody. This method is very rapid and can be extraordinarily successful. - [Read Epitope Mapping Using Synthetic Biotin-Labeled Peptides Protocol] |