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Well, direct comparisons are not easy as there are a host of different enzyme assays, each with different ad- and disadvantages.

In general terms immuniblots can be adapted to all kind of proteins, provided you can get a good antibody, whereas enzyme assays require that the protein under investigation has some quantifiable enzyme activity.

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  • 5 weeks later...

Immunoblots are generally the first step to confirm that your protein is physically "there" (i.e. in your sample/being produced by your system)

Pros:

  • Quick and relatively cheap (dependent on how expensive your Abs are)
  • Quantifiable if compared against known concentrations of your protein of interest

Cons:

  • Doesn't give you any indication of activity, only showing the total amount of protein present
  • Heavily dependent on the accuracy of your Abs

Enzyme assay kits are useful if your protein of interest is known/relatively common/a substrate is known.

Pros:

  • Usually quick, and very reliable results on the activity of your protein product

Cons:

  • Taylor-made to suit your protein product, meaning it has to have known activity (you can of course devise your own assay if you know a substrate)
  • Can be more expensive, and usually requires additional equipment (i.e. plate reader)
  • Only shows how much of the protein is active, and not the total amount produced

These assays are generally complementary, and it's rare to see a paper without some form of both.

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