Hey Christina, 

I'm not sure how much the Bradford will help as there will likely be a lot of 
other proteins in the medium that the antibody is in (ie FBS etc) as you 
mention.  You wouldn't just get the Ab concentration.  Maybe for some 
biotinylation kits this isn't a problem but I'm not sure what you're using.

Do you have a kit that you can straight up biotinylate the Ab while it's still 
in the medium or do you need to purify it?  Does it need to be biotinylated or 
can you come in with a biotinylated secondary (or are you dealing with 
mouse-on-mouse problems)?

Katy

Message: 3
Date: Thu, 11 Oct 2012 15:05:39 -0400
From: "Thurby, Christina" <christina.thu...@bms.com>
Subject: [Histonet] protein concentration on tissue culture
        supernatant
To: "histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu"
        <histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu>
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Please don't blast me if this is a really dumb question.  I have a tissue 
culture supernatant antibody.  I need to know the protein concentration - 
called the vendor, it is unknown.  Does anyone know if I can just run a 
Bradford to get the protein concentration - or will it be irrelevant do to 
other proteins present in the antibody?  This is an IVD antibody, so I expect 
it to be specific for the target antigen.  This is an unconjugated antibody and 
I want to biotinylate it, but I need a starting protein concentration.  Anyone 
out there with experience doing this with a tissue culture supernatant antibody?

Christina Thurby
Bristol Myers Squibb
812-307-2093



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