Casting agarose gels with the Owl system
Gel recipe: 25 mL 1x TAE buffer, 0.3 g agarose –> boil by microwave until dissolved (about 45-55 sec on our microwave) —> add 1.25 µL 10 mg/mL ethidium bromide
Gel recipe: 25 mL 1x TAE buffer, 0.3 g agarose –> boil by microwave until dissolved (about 45-55 sec on our microwave) —> add 1.25 µL 10 mg/mL ethidium bromide
Slide agarose gels can be run in 7 minutes and give great resolution of DNA samples. Multiple gels can be prepared at once and saved for up to a month. Slide gels use only 0.12 g of agarose per gel which reduces the cost of running gels. See the accompanying video “Running slide gels” below.
Gel recipe: 10 mL 1x TAE buffer, 0.12 g agarose –> boil by microwave until dissolved (about 45 sec on our microwave) —> add 0.5 µL 10 mg/mL ethidium bromide
Slide agarose gels can be run in 7 minutes and give great resolution of DNA samples. Multiple gels can be prepared at once and saved for up to a month. Slide gels use only 0.12 g of agarose per gel which reduces the cost of running gels. See “Preparing slide gels” above for casting the gels.
This video protocol shows you how to perform an alkaline lysis plasmid miniprep. The DNA purification industry would like you to believe that their kits are necessary to obtain plasmid DNA suitable for routine applications. This is simply not true. In fact, isolating large quantities of high purity plasmid DNA is really easy. Plasmid miniprep procedures commonly use columns that give low yield and are relatively expensive. This modified version of the traditional alkaline lysis miniprep produces large yields of high quality DNA and costs less than $0.05 per prep (including cost of tubes). Download a printable plasmid miniprep protocol here. The protocol described here (and shown in the video) has a few modification from the classical miniprep protocol found in books such as “Molecular Cloning” that increase the purity of the plasmid DNA.