http://www.microscopeforums.com/f7/fluorescence-microscopy-35.html
http://heybryan.org/instrumentation/instru.html
What sort of specs do we need? Is this close to basic microscopy?
> the naked eye if you are using a strong enough promoter. Another
> reporter would be to use the Lac operon to produce a drop in pH in
> the growth medium (for liquid cultures). This method only needs a
> relatively inexpensive pH meter or even disposable litmus paper
> strips, although it would be difficult to get more than a yes/no
> answer without being clever.
Maybe a chromatography-related solution, where a chemical reaction with
the litmus paper causes a coloration change that would otherwise be
unnoticable.
> Something that is very important to any kind of microbiology work is
> the ability to keep everything sterile. Ideally this is done using
> an autoclave, but for sterilizing petri dishes/anything metal, you
> could feasibly use 70% ethanol and a flame.
Yes, any information on doing your own clean room?
> You also need the ability to select which cells have the DNA that
> you want in them and which don't. This is usually done using drug
> resistance plasmids in E. coli, but beta-gal selection might be a
> more feasible and cheap option for do-it-yourself work. Cheers,
I've heard about antibody resistance in ecoli, but what's beta-gal
selection?
- Bryan
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