Research Keyword: sample preparation

Optimized protein extraction protocol from human skin samples

Researchers developed an improved method for extracting and analyzing proteins from human skin samples. Using specialized equipment and chemical treatments, they were able to identify about 6,000 different proteins in skin tissue, which is significantly more than previous methods could detect. This new protocol is particularly useful for studying skin diseases like fungal infections and could help identify new treatments by revealing how proteins change in diseased skin.

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Silver Chloride Precipitation-limiting Factor for Accurate Silver Determination in Ag-accumulating Mushrooms After Nitric Acid Digestion

This research addresses a critical problem in measuring silver content in certain mushrooms, particularly silver-accumulating Amanita species. Scientists discovered that standard laboratory digestion procedures using nitric acid can cause silver to precipitate as silver chloride, making it invisible to measurement instruments and leading to false low results. The study demonstrates that neutron activation analysis is more accurate for measuring silver in these mushrooms, or alternatively, specialized multi-step digestion procedures can dissolve the precipitated silver chloride to obtain accurate measurements.

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Temporal and thermal optimization of trypsin digestion for the cryptococcal proteome

Scientists optimized how to digest proteins from a dangerous fungus called Cryptococcus neoformans to better identify all its proteins. They tested different time and temperature combinations for enzyme treatment and found that shorter digestion times (1 hour instead of overnight) work just as well. This finding makes protein analysis faster and easier for studying fungal infections and finding new treatments.

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