boiling. TE is the solution. It's not as bad as RNAse though, which is
On 19/03/14 19:31, Sebastian Cocioba wrote:
> I know invitrogen sells "genestrings" which save costs by letting u do
> the subcloning. They are lyophilized fragments. Maybe that's what he
> meant by artificial genes in a vial. TE buffer worked well for me. Have
> some plasmids and ready to go PCR fragments at -20 for four years and
> no detectable issues. I even stored some in holy water (ultra pure
> depec treated) in same conditions and nothing out of the ordinary. More
> important I think is dnase activity than temp. Its a very stable
> molecule after all.
>
> Sebastian S. Cocioba
> CEO & Founder
> New York Botanics, LLC
> Plant Biotech R&D From: Jeswin
> Sent: 3/19/2014 1:30 PM
> To:
diy...@googlegroups.com
> Subject: Re: [DIYbio] Storing DNA
> On Wed, Mar 12, 2014 at 10:06 PM, Jordan Fryer <
jfre...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> What sort of equipment would you use to store artificial genes in vials? I
>> thought a -20 C freezer would be good for this, but I need your opinions.
>>
>
> What exactly do you mean by "artificial genes in vials"?
>
> Plasmids, PCR products, gDNA in buffer (TE, etc) at -20C
> Lyophilized oligos can be kept at 4C
>
> I think I have some plasmids at -80C and they've been there for many years now.
>
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