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-cory
Need DIY broth medias for mammalian and bacterial cells.
Also KCl might be found as salt-alternative at food stores.
I put the glowing bacteria into a marmelade jar containing some 200-300 mL of LB-Medium. It was glowing for some days but now it's not glowing anymore... I assume most of the bacteria are dead. Can I still use them for miniprep, or are the plasmids destroyed when doing apoptosis???
would it be much better to do a new liquid culture, 3mL or so, in a 50 or 100 mL tube? How can I make sure that they get enough oxygen without contamination? alu foil?
Good News: I asked @university, if I could get some KCl and d.earth. Now I have several gramms of both.
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Hello @all,
I was wondering if I could do a dirty miniprep without EDTA.
What I have: weak centrifuge, SLS (sodium lauryl sulfate), NaOH, vinegar, ethanol (I have access to both wodka and pure ethanol), water.
Can you do a mp with this limited resources?
What I want: Some ~60 to 70 % plasmids, some remaining proteins, RNA, mabe some fragments of chromosomal DNA.
I think with this percentage you can still do a transformation with E.Coli? Because Proteins will either be used or digested, RNA my do it's job inside the cell, chromosomal DNA has no origin of replication.
Only the plasmids will be able to replicate and thus you will get some transformants. These you select with ampicillin anyway. (Clearly, you won't get so much transformants, but who cares? )
Will DNAses inside the solution possibly destroy the plasmids??
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-cory
The first two concentrations are decent, did you records the 230, 260, and 280nm absorbance levels? The ratios between them tell you about organic solvent contamination (230nm, mainly phenol but others too) and DNA to protein level which is a measure of general purity (280nm is tryptophan's peak, which is used as the average/common protein peak)
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Iirc as close to 2 as possible.
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230nm is used for phenol and related organic detection, it doesn't factor into the 260:280 number
The 260:280 ratio should actually be as close to 1.8 as possible. Lower is indicative of too much protein and higher can indicate RNA. (Could always tell when the RNase was going bad when all the preps were 2.1 or higher.) Anything (approximately) outside the 1.7 to 2.0 range and it becomes difficult to trust the 230nm reading used to calculate the concentration.
On Saturday, July 28, 2012 7:09:44 AM UTC-7, Avery wrote:
Iirc as close to 2 as possible.
On Jul 28, 2012 5:38 AM, "Mega" <masters...@gmail.com> wrote:
So, the values are:
For the 209.39 ng/uL plasmid the 260:280 ratio is 1.46
176.51 ng/uL -> 1.91
54.17 ng/uL -> 1.74
I think 1.91 is the best? Should it be high or low? ;)
Am Sonntag, 27. Mai 2012 17:54:23 UTC+2 schrieb Mega:Hello @all,--
I was wondering if I could do a dirty miniprep without EDTA.
What I have: weak centrifuge, SLS (sodium lauryl sulfate), NaOH, vinegar, ethanol (I have access to both wodka and pure ethanol), water.
Can you do a mp with this limited resources?
What I want: Some ~60 to 70 % plasmids, some remaining proteins, RNA, mabe some fragments of chromosomal DNA.
I think with this percentage you can still do a transformation with E.Coli? Because Proteins will either be used or digested, RNA my do it's job inside the cell, chromosomal DNA has no origin of replication.
Only the plasmids will be able to replicate and thus you will get some transformants. These you select with ampicillin anyway. (Clearly, you won't get so much transformants, but who cares? )
Will DNAses inside the solution possibly destroy the plasmids??
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