Biology, asked by BhavaniShankar1564, 11 months ago

The moles that most interfer with gel based proteomics are

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Answered by yk9978351044
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Answer:

Explanation:In more than 20 years of the proteomics era, considerable technical developments and scientific discoveries have contributed to the advancement of this field of research. Gel-based proteomics has been popular for studying the proteomic changes during growth and development of plants as well as for the analysis of responses to different biotic and abiotic stimuli. The most widely used gel-based technique is two dimensional (2D) gel electrophoresis, in which around 2000 protein spots can be clearly visualized and processed prior to identification by mass spectrometry. Although many techniques have been developed to improve the quality and number of spots in a 2D gel, these enhancements are still not good enough to study the entire cellular proteome. It is important to also consider low abundant proteins, many of which could play critical roles in particular biological processes.

Answered by Amankumar2newton
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Answer:

Applications of proteomics such as chemicalproteomics, protein expression profiling, targeted protein quantitation, analysis of protein-protein interactions and post-translational modification are widely used by various sections of the industry.

Explanation:

Proteomics typically gives us a better understanding of an organism than genomics. First, the level of transcription of a gene gives only a rough estimate of its level of expression into a protein. ... Finally, protein degradation rate plays an important role in protein content.

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