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· · · Protein Pictures 16 photos 9 comments |
· · · Protein Pictures 16 photos 9 comments |
· · · Protein Pictures 16 photos 9 comments | |||
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| Thanks for the protocol. What is the benifit of staining the gel using commasie blue? I am assuming unless you use aan antibody for a specific protein you cannot differentiate your band from other bands. Thanks |
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| Thats a decent protocol however if you are looking for more detailed protocol see the protocol SDS-PAGE protocol |
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| Hello...i'm from Norway and new to this forum, which i now hope to visit frequntly in the future. I'm in my last year of bachelor in biotechnology, and last week we had an experiment in biochemistry with SDS-PAGE where the sample showed no migration at all. Just some drifting off to the sides, and the teacher did not bother to photograph. As this was a school experiment we did not run the samples over, and the teacher said it could only be that no power had run through the gel. But a second group shared the gel machine and theire gel migrated very nicly, as did all other groups on different machines. In the prosess of setting up the machine and gel with buffers we checked for leakage and it all looked fine. Unfortunately as we had a different experiment going on as the gel electroforeses was running, it was stressful and we forgot to check up on the migration, and probable left it running too long, although as said the other group got nice results. So please if anyone have any suggestions as to what went wrong or why this might have happend please share it with me so i get a better understanding, than a just no power explanation. I'm thinking the machine was broken or something on one side of the gel connections. Anyways, thanks alot! Stewdew |
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| This is a perfect example of (probably) filling the apparatus too high with buffer. A lab technician explained to me (he knew the process through quite in detail) that any small holes in the apparatus/gel can be quite detrimental to the flow of buffer ions that move your proteins through the gel. If there is no buffer where there are holes, the ions have no choice but to go through the gel first and then out the bottom. however, by filling the buffer higher, you are allowing any buffer ions/electrical current to go through the minute holes/defects in the system, minimizing the electrical current where you need it most (through the gel) and thus slowing migration down a lot... you must have been unlucky and got a bad system, however next time filling the buffer to just above the bottom electrode will prevent this. cheers ![]() |
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