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leelee

Member Since 09 Mar 2009
Offline Last Active Yesterday, 02:20 AM
*****

#152939 ABO blood grouping help

Posted mdfenko on 26 March 2013 - 11:31 AM

if it doesn't react to anti-a, anti-b or anti-ab (therefore, absence of antigen), and the choices are abo, then what does that leave?


#152980 Annealing temperature for PCR

Posted phage434 on 26 March 2013 - 07:11 PM

You can calculate all day, and look up any number of formulas, but that won't make your PCR work. Try it. I'd suggest starting with a 55 anneal.


#152282 Reverse Transcriptase @ Room temperature for 48 hours

Posted Tabaluga on 14 March 2013 - 05:18 PM

And I just see that leelee stated the same thing in a lot less words Posted Image


#152222 Non-reproducible results/experiments

Posted rhombus on 14 March 2013 - 09:09 AM

Dear Science noob,

This is an extremely common problem that I have seen over the years. You comment:-

"methods provided in published papers"    .............. this is a big problem in that this part of a paper should probably be the largest section but is commonly just cut to a bear minimum. There are lots of "tricks" that are left out of this section that are essential for thew experiment to be reproduced.

"Same concentration, same cell lines, same conditions"................every cell paper I read states " the cells were grown in a humidified CO2 Incubator at 5% CO2. How many researchers routinely check for humidifiaction AND FYRITE THEIR INCUBATORS TO CHECK PRECISELY THE INTERNAL CO2 CONCENTRATION IN THEIR INCUBATORS.

ARE THE INCUBATORS DIRECT HEAT OR FAN ASSISTED?

WHERE DOE YOUR FOETAL CALF SERUM COME FROM?.......there are massive differences between the qualitof serum sourced for the many countries of the world that produce it.

HOW MANY RESEARCHERS HAVE AUTHENTICATED THEIR CELLS BEFORE USING THEM?

HOW MANY RESEARCHERS ARE WORKING WITH MYCOPLASMA INFECTED CELLS BECAUSE THEY DO NOT TEST THEM?


Does this start to answer your question about reproducibility?

Kindest regards

Uncle Rhombus


#152156 Using RT-PCR to find the presence of a deletion in a gene

Posted GNANA on 13 March 2013 - 03:45 AM

since you say deletion prone region is specific and if it is also small and distinguishable in terms of its size by PCR, how about designing primer covering few hundred base pairs at the 5 and 3' end of ur deletion region(which shd  present both in wild type and the deletion), so that you can distinguish the presence of deletion by size, in this case even if the deletion is in one allele you shd get two products with size corresponding to deletion and wild type.


#151627 Trypan blue

Posted Curtis on 06 March 2013 - 01:42 AM

You just registered to ask this question? I'm impressed
let's say you want 1ml of 0.4%
c1v1=c2v2
0.6xv1=0.004x1000ul =>v1= 6.6 ul, take this amount from the original bottle and top up to 1 ml with water.



#149796 how to make a working solution of a primers for pcr reaction??

Posted almost a doctor on 07 February 2013 - 01:43 AM

The data sheet you attached says:  "These Primers and Probe are synthesised and purified by PAGE. They are supplied as 0.2 OD (6.6 μgs) lyophilized. To reconstitute, dissolve in 20 μl sterile water, check concentraion by OD before use."

So, according to this you just have to add 20µl of water.  The predicted concentration will be 330ng/µl  (6.6µg/20µl), but you should confirm by nanodrop or similar methods.   From this dilute to your working concentration.  

I'm not sure where you get that  "The lyophilized concentration of primer is 20 pmol"  On that, a very important point.  20pmol  is NOT a concentration, is total amount.  Same goes for 7µg  (or actually 6.6µg according to the attached document), this is NOT a concentration but an absolute amount.   You can make this up to the required concentrations by adding water (or TE).

Back to what the data sheet suggests, of dissolving in 20µl of water, and assuming that 6.6µg of primers are indeed 20pmol.  Primers dissolved this way will be at a concentration of 1µM  (20pmol/20µl).

Hope this helps.


#149246 too much DNA on agarose gel

Posted bob1 on 30 January 2013 - 07:52 PM

It doesn't run faster if you have too much, if anything it is more likely to run slower (e,g. get caught in the well).


#149070 Cells stop to grow

Posted bob1 on 28 January 2013 - 11:43 AM

Hmmm, if they were immortalized - how did they do it?   It is quite likely that they used an insert like large T antigen, in which case the MEFs may have lost it (and they certainly won't be passage 2, more like passage 30 since the initial isolation and having to get the gene stably expressed).   You may need to find out how they did the immortalization and either re-do it or try adding some of the selective antibiotic to the medium to ensure that the immortalizing agent's expression is maintained.


#147799 Large-Scale Purification of Non-Secreted Protein in E.Coli or CHO Cells

Posted Curtis on 09 January 2013 - 10:13 PM

:D @ leelee


#147516 Ethidiumbromide

Posted pito on 05 January 2013 - 07:22 AM

SYBR Green  for example..

You should be able to find them yourself....
However keep in mind that some of the alternatives seem to be more "dangerous" then ethidium bromide itself.

PS. the horror stories about ethidiumbromide are really over the top and not true at all. Many people seem not to be able to search for information themself and just accept "stories" others told them.


#147436 my competent cell grow on any agar plate

Posted phage434 on 04 January 2013 - 06:07 AM

Another possibility is that you have contaminated the cells during your competent cell prep with something other than E. coli.  Tap water or ice often contains resistant organisms.


#146955 Question about isolating DNA from the blood sample

Posted Trof on 19 December 2012 - 08:10 AM

First get rid of erythrocytes. There is huge amount of them and heme is a potent PCR inhibitor. We lyse the erythrocytes from whole EDTA blood (heparin is also not suitable for PCR later) and use only washed leukocytes for DNA isolation.

5-9 ml of blood fil up to 50 ml with 1x lysis buffer (ice cold) and mix.
40 minutes on ice, mix gently once in a while.
centrifuge 10 minutes/ 1125 g/ 4 deg
draw off supernatant, wash (resuspend pelet) with 15 ml of 1x lysis buffer
centrifuge again
wash with 15 ml ice cold PBS pH 7.4
centrifuge again
now you should have (mostly) leukocytes, for any subsequent DNA isolation method.

10x lysis buffer
1.5 M  NH4Cl   
100 mM NH4HCO3   
10 mM Na2EDTA
adjust pH to 8.

But if you use QIAGEN kits you may as well buy QIAGEN kit designed for blood, then you don't need to do this.


#146857 Procedures to replace vial of cells and passage number.

Posted bob1 on 17 December 2012 - 11:50 AM

View Postscience noob, on 16 December 2012 - 10:38 PM, said:

Different people have different ways to record passage number.  The consensus is that as long as you've trypsinised the cells from the plastic surface, the cells will be P+1.  Some people label these cells (to be frozen) as P and then label P+1 once they thaw it out and replate.  On the other hand, some would label any cells lifted from the plastic culture surface as P+1 and when you plate these down it will still remain as P+1.
I use this system - any time the cells are lifted and expanded or for freezing down add a passage #.  For instance if I took some cells at p2 and lifted them and froze them down (p+1), I would write p3 on the tube and thaw them as p3...

Also note that the different serum/DMSO/medium combinations should all work fine, though I think most people would agree that 10% DMSO and a slow freeze with a quick thaw for revival is best.  Adding DMSO straight to serum can cause precipitation of proteins in the serum, so I tend to avoid that and use 10% serum (Actually this owrks out ot be about 12% I think, with the serum that is already in the medium), 10% DMSO and 80% medium.


#145965 Influenza: cell and mechanism information?

Posted bob1 on 28 November 2012 - 12:55 AM

here




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