11 October 2019 1 4K Report

1. When performing ELISA, we have 2 different panels: standard and sample. In western blot, we do BSA assay at first to quantify protein concentration, so if the protein concentration is too much, we can dilute the sample and redo the BSA assay. However, for ELISA, we can only know until the last step, so if the samples are way too blue compared to standard, which meant the OD of sample is higher than standard, we need to redo the ELISA again? It will be wasted of reagent and also we don't have many samples to perform again. Is there any way we can know sample is too condensed so we can dilute the sample before the experiment?

2. I made a mistake then incubate standard and sample with Avidin-HRP for too long (protocol is 30min, but I did 1hour) so my samples were much blue than standard. Do I need to dilute the sample or this effect is because I incubated Avidin too long? My friend said if the reason for this is because of Avidin so standard should be the same blue as a sample, but in this case, it was not. So the reason might be due to the condensed samples. What do you think?

More Ha Pham's questions See All
Similar questions and discussions