hobglobin, on 04 May 2013 - 12:12 PM, said:
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#154610 Literature quote guessing game
Posted
casandra
on 04 May 2013 - 12:16 PM
#154579 Immunofluorescence: simultaneous polyclonal and monoclonal staining to same prot
Posted
bob1
on 04 May 2013 - 01:11 AM
#154533 Vote section
Posted
bioforum
on 02 May 2013 - 08:45 PM
Also, when we upgrade the forum program next time, we will have a new function which allows users to vote for the best answer chosen from all replies to a question, something similar to Yahoo answers.
#152394 Words, Words, Words
Posted
casandra
on 16 March 2013 - 11:53 AM
plastics? QED...you and your pretty weird and cheap taste...
#151177 Media doesn't change colour?
Posted
bob1
on 27 February 2013 - 11:33 AM
The first thing you should do is culture some of the cells without antibiotics (if your sterile technique is any good you shouldn't need them for culturing at all) and see if you get a contaminant growing - these will often cause medium colour changes, especially towards basic pH's. The presence of antibiotics in the medium can suppress but not eliminate low level bacterial contaminants, which can still have an effect on the cells.
#150514 Centrifugation speeds for cells.
Posted
madelingirly
on 17 February 2013 - 03:16 PM
I know this is out of ur discussion, but regarding converting RPM into G or vice verse, I just measure the radius of my centrifugal ring, not the whole machine, just the rotor radius with a ruler or something, put the data on RPM-G converter like these website:
http://www.endmemo.com/bio/grpm.php
http://www.geneinfin...p/sp_rotor.html
then I got the required number in G or in RPM
#150369 Designing an experiement to identify mutations in particular genes
Posted
neuron
on 14 February 2013 - 11:39 PM
http://www.babec.org..._Guide_2012.pdf
and PCR calculator-
http://www.sigmaaldr.../pcr-tools.html
#150089 How do you improve your bio skills?
Posted
rhombus
on 11 February 2013 - 03:07 AM
To answer your question " how to improve your bio skills"
There are many to learn. The most important to start with is basic lab techniques. These may include:-
Basic pipetting skills
Serial Dilutions
Western Blotting Basic cell and tissue culture
Methods of sterilisation
Basic microbiology
Basic molecular biology
.......the list is endless
Then you have to learn about setting up experiments:-
Positive and negative controls
Optimisation steps
The critical path for your experiments
Time management skills
Hypothesis lead experiments
Accuracy as well as precision....i.e. your experiments must be reproducible
......the list is endless
Then you have to learn to present your research/results to your collegues....and then further afield:-
Statistical analysis
Presentation skills
What content to put in AND LEAVE OUT
Anticipating ackward questions
Looking for weaknesses in the results
Further experiments that need to be done
....the list is endless
Then if you are lucky you can contribute or write papers to go into high impsct journals:-
Again most of the above will come into that.
The most important thing I can impress on young people coming into science is the importance of which research group they join. I was very lucky in my career that the first lab head I worked for won a Nobel prize for physiology in the 1980's. This set the standard for the whole department and the post doc I worked for spent many yeras with me teaching me the basics as listed above. You can read many books and scientific papers but the most important thing is
EXPERIENCE....EXPERIENCE.....EXPERIENCE
I hope some of this is useful
Kindest regards
Uncle Rhombus
#149505 Electrophoresis problem , please help pals !
Posted
hobglobin
on 03 February 2013 - 10:42 AM
Sharper bands you can get e.g. if you start with 80 V until the loading dye is in the agarose and then increasing to 120 V (and if TAE buffer I wouldn't increase more), fast loading of all the wells (avoiding diffusion), a sufficiently long polymerisation time of the gel. And running the gel not too long, as then diffusion becomes a factor.
#148648 PCR band slightly BELOW expected length ?!
Posted
jerryshelly1
on 23 January 2013 - 10:40 AM
1-RT-PCR primers are usually designed to have a product of 100-150Kb. Quadruple check your gene from Pubmed with your primers by ClustalW (just to ensure there binding site).
2- Not necessarily. Depending on the sequence of your primers, it may just have a high affinity for your gene of interest.
*If all else fails, just redesign your primers. I hope this helps.
#147946 Suggestion for a book!
Posted
Pangea
on 13 January 2013 - 06:49 AM
The part filetype will give you just PDF files and gives you a smile in your face:). You can do this also with doc, xls, etc. Enjoy the discovery.
Books:
Cytokine Protocols (Methods in Molecular Biology)
http://elib.fk.uwks....ogy Series].pdf
http://www.ctf.edu.t...1_Cytokines.pdf
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