Brian completed a short post-doc at The University of Texas Medical Branch for a year after earning his PhD at Baylor College of Medicine in Molecular Virology and Microbiology. He’s currently working in the private sector managing immunoprecipitation and Western blot projects in both product development (R&D) and QA/QC of existing antibodies.

Articles by Brian McWilliams

An Exploration of the Sigmoidal Curve – Math for the Rest of Us

An Exploration of the Sigmoidal Curve – Math for the Rest of Us

ELISA (Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay) is the heartbeat of many labs in the research world, owing to its simplicity and its ability to answer a very basic question: how much of protein/peptide/antibody is in my sample?  More specifically, it can be used to answer such questions as: How much IgG is in the serum after I…

Titering Phage – Counting Something Invisible with Something Only Slightly More Visible

Titering Phage – The Plaque Assay Phage display is a molecular technique used to isolate binding or interaction partners to molecules of interest from an extensive library. Such libraries are often derived from the variable regions of native B-cell antibody-binding genes cloned into phage DNA. A single round of phage display panning involves many important steps. However, the…

Stripping blots

Stripping Blots – It’s All Fun and Games Until Someone Loses Their Protein

Like all technical fields, molecular biology contains a very robust “theoretical” realm and an equally robust “practical” realm. Unfortunately, these two existences don’t seem to overlap as often as we’d like. Consider, for example, a simple Western blot. While an antibody interacting with its target on a membrane seems pretty straightforward, there are numerous other…

Finding a Needle in a Needlestack Using Phage Display

Finding a Needle in a Needlestack Using Phage Display

Few things can dash your hopes quite like phages. They can annihilate whole bacteria cultures in the blink of an eye, and make your next cloning or expression project impossible. But you can harness these evil-do-ers for good. And use phages to screen massive libraries of peptides. Learn how below. The Typical “Evil” Phage Experience…

Roadside Assistance: Fixing Your Broken-Down ELISA

Roadside Assistance: Fixing Your Broken-Down ELISA

The ELISA (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) is arguably one of the most important and versatile tools in the toolbox of molecular biologists, biochemists and diagnosticians across the world. Defined by its simplicity and speed, the assay is easy to learn and perform in as few as five steps. But with so few variables to manipulate, an…