I've tried some samples from these folks for their cDNA and qRT-PCR
synthesis kits, just click on a product and it should have a "sample"
button on the right side
http://www.quantabio.com/
Next, expiration dates. This has always been a topic of contention with me. Life puts expiration dates on everything and the dates seem to be shorter and shorter. One thing they put expiration dates on is sequencing polymer. Question, why would acrylamide ever go bad? But Life puts a three month expiration on a bottle? The answer is pretty simple, if they put an expiration on the bottle we will throw it out AND BUY MORE! Its marketing. Oligos don't expire, polymer doesn't expire, many of the products we consume don't expire..but there is still an expiration date, why? Well, some of the products we use do expire, for instance enzymes loose activity, so companies take advantage of this fact and put expiration dates on everything; SO WE BUY MORE!
My recomendation, use common sense. Do your own stability study. We're scientists and should know how to measure change as a function of time for the products we consume.
Regards;
J
J Adams
Azco Biotech, Inc.
3626 Ocean Ranch Blvd.
Oceanside, CA 92056
t. 858-525-2770
incisive systematics <ma...@insysx.com> wrote:
>Hi Guys,
>
>I come from the marketing side of the biotech business. Currently I'm a
>biotech marketing consultant (http://www.insysx.com) after working for
>companies such as Invitrogen, BioTrove (Life Tech) and Affymetrix.
>
>So time to give you the definitive answers to Jonathan's and Nathan's
>speculations above.....
>
>First QuantaBio used to be the manufacturer of BioRad's real time PCR mixes
>... including for the BioRad iQ machines. Hence the mix which is specific
>to that machine. Other manufacturers' machines (e.g. ABI, Qiagen) generally
>require a passive reference dye called ROX to even out volume differences
>from well to well in the PCR plate. So that's the ROX ingredient in the ROX
>mix. Low ROX is a particular low concentration ROX variant variant on that
>system for reasons i won't get into here.
>
>The CT in PerfeCTa is actually really cheesy marketing (says the
>marketer!). In real time PCR / qPCR analysis the key measure is the PCR
>cycle where fluorescence of the amplified DNA exceeds the threshold
>(background). This is referred to as the Threshold Cycle or CT. In
>quantitative real time PCR, s difference of 3.3 cycles in CT represents a
>ten fold difference in the quantity of original target. E.g. if one sample
>has a CT of 10 and another sample has a CT of 13.3, the first sample has a
>ten fold higher abundance of the target.
>
>Best,
>
>Matt Lawes PhD MBA
>Principal
>InSysX LLC
>
>On Friday, August 24, 2012 2:29:10 AM UTC-4, Nathan McCorkle wrote:
>>
>> On Thu, Aug 23, 2012 at 10:16 PM, Jonathan Cline <jnc...@gmail.com<javascript:>>
>> > ## jcl...@ieee.org <javascript:>
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>>
>>
>> --
>> Nathan McCorkle
>> Rochester Institute of Technology
>> College of Science, Biotechnology/Bioinformatics
>>
>
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