Team:Hannover/Protocols/Detection/Precipitation

From 2014.igem.org

Revision as of 20:54, 14 October 2014 by E k o (Talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Protocols / Precipitating Bacteria for MS Analysis

If you have to deal with heavy metals, choose nitril gloves and change them once you came in contact with them!.

Material:

12 % Running gel2.1 ml H2O,
2.5 ml acrylamide 4K 29:1 mix (40 %),
1.6 ml 1.5 M Tris-HCl pH 8.8,
62.5 μl 10 % SDS,
62.5 μl 10 % APS,
2.5 μl TEMED
12 % Stacking gel2.7 ml H2O,
680 μl acrylamide 4K 29:1 mix (40 %),
540 μl 1 M Tris-HCl pH 6.8,
40 μl 10 % SDS,
30 μl 10 % APS,
8 μl TEMED
Electrophoresis system
Running buffer250 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.3,
1.92 mM glycine,
0,1 % (v/v) SDS

Protocol:

After E. coliSDS polyacrylamide gels were prepared in the so-called PerfectBlue™ Twin Double Gel System (PEQLAB Biotechnologie GMBH, Erlangen). After ensuring the aperture was waterproof, the 12 % running gel was mixed and filled into the chamber. Pipetting 1 ml of H2O on top of the running gel prevented coves between the entire running and stacking gel. The comb was stuck into the chamber to maintain the right gel depth. After polymerization, the remaining H2O was removed and the 12 % stacking gel (Table 1) followed. To create sample pockets a comb was inserted centrally. If the stacking gel was also polymerized, 1 x running buffer (Table 1) was used to run the Double Gel System via the SDS gel. After loading the generated pockets with the samples, the gel was run for 1:10 1:20 h at 150 V.