Team:EPF-Lausanne/Notebook/July2011

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[[File:EPFL-2011-07-13_Stitch_PCR.jpg|thumb|First result from the fusion PCR: tetR mutant EA37 appears in "detectable" amounts]]
[[File:EPFL-2011-07-13_Stitch_PCR.jpg|thumb|First result from the fusion PCR: tetR mutant EA37 appears in "detectable" amounts]]
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Douglas purified the gels containing yesterday's mutation-PCR products, following the XXX protocol XXX. Isopropanol was added to the "Common PCR" product, as its expected length is inferior to 500bp. The final DNA concentrations, measured by photospectrometry, are listed in the following table. Even the very low concentration of YF36 should be sufficient for a PCR template, and the weird "260/280" ratio apparently results from agarose gel residues.
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Douglas purified the gels containing yesterday's mutation-PCR products, following the [[Team:EPF-Lausanne/Protocols/Gel_purification| gel purification protocol]]. Isopropanol was added to the "Common PCR" product, as its expected length is inferior to 500bp. The final DNA concentrations, measured by photospectrometry, are listed in the following table. Even the very low concentration of YF36 should be sufficient for a PCR template, and the weird "260/280" ratio apparently results from agarose gel residues.
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These sequences were then used for a fusion PCR, to stitch mutants YF36, EA37, and YF42 to the common sequence, according to the protocol *To be written*. Only the EA37 mutant, which was also the brightest on the PCR gels, yielded a significant amount of product. The next step is to check the product is the desired mutant, in order to confirm the success of this method. We also have to refine the PCR to get the other mutants to work; it seems the problem comes from the primers' melting temperature.
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These sequences were then used for a fusion PCR, to stitch mutants YF36, EA37, and YF42 to the common sequence, according to the [Team:EPF-Lausanne/Protocols/TetR_Extension_PCR|overlap extension PCR protocol]. Only the EA37 mutant, which was also the brightest on the PCR gels, yielded a significant amount of product. The next step is to check the product is the desired mutant, in order to confirm the success of this method. We also have to refine the PCR to get the other mutants to work; it seems the problem comes from the primers' melting temperature.
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Revision as of 08:18, 20 July 2011