Team:Alberta/Project/BeadBindingCapacity
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<li>Using the A<sub>260</sub> readings, calculate respective ng of DNA by multiplying volume of DNA applied to beads. | <li>Using the A<sub>260</sub> readings, calculate respective ng of DNA by multiplying volume of DNA applied to beads. | ||
<li>Calculate the difference of DNA for each set of readings per bead volume to give ng of DNA bound to bead. | <li>Calculate the difference of DNA for each set of readings per bead volume to give ng of DNA bound to bead. | ||
- | <li> | + | <li>Substitute the ng DNA bound into the following equation to get pmol of DNA: <br><math>(ng DNA<sub>bound</sub> x 10<sup>9</sup>) / (21519.1 g mol<sup>-1</sup> x 10<sup>12</sup>)</math></br> |
<li>Divide this number by the μL of beads used to get binding capacity: <br><math>μL Beads x 10<sup>3</sup> x 4 mg mL<sup>-1</sup></math></br> | <li>Divide this number by the μL of beads used to get binding capacity: <br><math>μL Beads x 10<sup>3</sup> x 4 mg mL<sup>-1</sup></math></br> | ||
</ul> | </ul> |
Latest revision as of 20:06, 21 October 2009
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Anchor Binding CapacityWhat you will need:
Binding Capacity
Calculation
DisclaimerBy doing the binding capacity in this manner we found that binding capacity is highly dependant on DNA and bead concentration (see the graphs "here"). Thus, we simply used the calculated binding capacity for 40 μL of beads since this is the volume we use for all builds. A better binding capacity assay should be developed, but due to time constraints this method proved good enough since multiple runs of this experiment yielded numbers with small standard deviation: |