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Molecular Biology Technical Skills. Skills  Micropipetting  Preparing solutions  Working with concentrations  Dilutions  Amounts  Agarose gel electrophoresis.

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Presentation on theme: "Molecular Biology Technical Skills. Skills  Micropipetting  Preparing solutions  Working with concentrations  Dilutions  Amounts  Agarose gel electrophoresis."— Presentation transcript:

1 Molecular Biology Technical Skills

2 Skills  Micropipetting  Preparing solutions  Working with concentrations  Dilutions  Amounts  Agarose gel electrophoresis

3 Micropipetting- Measuring small volumes  Allows to measure microliters (µL)  1 000 X less than 1 milliliter 2-20 µL 50-200 µL 100-1000 µL Max. 0.02 mL0.2mL1mL

4 Setting the volume- P20 Tens (0, 1=10 or 2=20) Units (0-9) Decimal (1-9 = 0.1-0.9)

5 Setting the volume- P200 Hundreds (0, 1=100 or 2=200) Tens (0, 1-9=10-90) Units (1-9)

6 Setting the volume- P1000 Thousands (0, 1=1000) Hundreds (0, 1-9=100-900) Tens (0, 1-9=10 - 90)

7 Using the micropipettor Step 1 Insert tip Step 2 Press plunger up to first stop Step 3 Insert tip in solution to be drawn Step 4 Draw up sample by slowly releasing plunger Step 5 Withdraw pipettor

8 Dispensing Start dispensing 1 st stop =Dispense 2 nd stop = Expel

9 Guidelines for optimal reproducibility  Use pipettor whose volume is closest to the one desired  Consistent SPEED and SMOOTHNESS to press and release the PLUNGER  Consistent IMMERSION DEPTH  3-4mm below surface  AVOID air bubbles  NEVER go beyond the limits of the pipettor

10 Preparing Solutions

11 Definitions  Solution  Mixture of 2 or more substances in a single phase  Solutions are composed of two constituents  Solute  Part that is being dissolved or diluted – Usually smaller amount  Solvent (OR Diluent)  Part of solution in which solute is dissolved – Usually greater volume

12 Concentrations Concentration = Quantity of solute Quantity of solution (Not solvent) Three basic ways to express concentrations: Molar concentration (Molarity) Percentages Mass per volume

13 Molarity   # of Moles of solute/Liter of solution   Mass of solute/MW of solute = Moles of solute   Moles of solute/vol. in L of solution = Molarity

14 Percentages  Percentage concentrations can be expressed as either:  V/V – volume of solute/100 mL of solution  W/W – weight of solute/100g of solution  W/V – Weight of solute/100mL of solution  All represent fractions of 100

15 Percentages (Cont’d)  %V/V  Ex. 4.1L solute/55L solution =7.5%  Must have same units top and bottom!  %W/V  Ex. 16g solute/50mL solution =32%  Must have units of same order of magnitude top and bottom!  % W/W  Ex. 1.7g solute/35g solution =4.9%  Must have same units top and bottom!

16 Dilutions Reducing a Concentration A Fraction

17 Dilutions  Dilution = making weaker solutions from stronger ones  Example: Making orange juice from frozen concentrate. You mix one can of frozen orange juice with three (3) cans of water.

18 Dilutions (cont’d)  Dilutions are expressed as the volume of the solution being diluted per the total final volume of the dilution  In the orange juice example, the dilution would be expressed as 1/4, for one can of O.J. to a TOTAL of four cans of diluted O.J. When saying the dilution, you would say, in the O.J. example: “one in four”.

19 Dilutions (cont’d)  Another example:  If you dilute 1 ml of serum with 9 ml of saline, the dilution would be written 1/10 or said “one in ten”, because you express the volume of the solution being diluted (1 ml of serum) per the TOTAL final volume of the dilution (10 ml total).

20 Dilutions (cont’d)  Another example:  One (1) part of concentrated acid is diluted with 100 parts of water. The total solution volume is 101 parts (1 part acid + 100 parts water). The dilution is written as 1/101 or said “one in one hundred and one”.

21 Dilutions (cont’d)  Notice that dilutions do NOT have units (cans, ml, or parts) but are expressed as one number to another number  Example: 1/10 or “one in ten”

22 Dilutions (cont’d)  Dilutions are always expressed with the original substance diluted as one (1). If more than one part of original substance is initially used, it is necessary to convert the original substance part to one (1) when the dilution is expressed.

23 Dilutions (cont’d) Example: Two (2) parts of dye are diluted with eight (8) parts of diluent (the term used for the diluting solution). The total solution volume is 10 parts (2 parts dye + 8 parts diluent). The dilution is initially expressed as 2/10, but the original substance must be expressed as one (1). To get the original volume to one (1), use a ratio and proportion equation, remembering that dilutions are stated in terms of 1 to something: ______2 parts dye = ___1.0___ 10 parts total volume x 10 parts total volume x 2 x = 10 2 x = 10 x = 5 x = 5 The dilution is expressed as 1/5.

24 Dilutions (cont’d) The dilution does not always end up in whole numbers. Example: Two parts (2) parts of whole blood are diluted with five (5) parts of saline. The total solution volume is seven (7) parts (2 parts of whole blood + 5 parts saline). The dilution would be 2/7, or, more correctly, 1/3.5. Again, this is calculated by using the ratio and proportion equation, remembering that dilutions are stated in terms of 1 to something: __2 parts blood_____ = ___1.0___ 7 parts total volume x 7 parts total volume x 2 x = 7 2 x = 7 x = 3.5 x = 3.5 The dilution is expressed as 1/3.5

25 What Does This Mean??  If a solution has a 1/10 dilution the fraction represents 1 part of the sample being diluted added to 9 parts of diluent for a total of 10 parts.  If this solution was prepared to a final volume of 110 mL, what volumes of solute and what volume of solvent have to be used?  In other words, what is the volume of 1 part and of 9 parts?

26 Dilution Factor  EXAMPLE: What is the dilution factor if you add 0.1 mL aliquot of a specimen to 9.9 mL of diluent?  The final volume is equal to the aliquot volume PLUS the diluent volume: 0.1 mL + 9.9 mL = 10 mL  The dilution factor is equal to the final volume divided by the aliquot volume: 10 mL/0.1 mL = 100X dilution factor

27 Practice Problem  What is the dilution factor when 0.2 mL is added to 3.8 mL of diluent?

28 Serial Dilutions  If a 1/8 dilution of the stock solution is made followed by a 1/6 dilution what is the final dilution?  The final dilution is: 1/8 x 1/6 = 1/48

29 Dilutions  Means to reduce a concentration  Dilution: A fraction of the dilution factor Ex. You have a solution at 25 mg/ml and wish to obtain a solution of 5mg/ml Dilution factor = Conc. I have Conc. I want Dilution factor = 25mg/mL 5mg/mL = 5X Dilution = 1/the dilution factor = 1/5 = 1 part/5 parts Total

30 Example  How would you prepare 25mL of a 2mM solution from a 0.1M stock?

31 Quantities  Quantities are equal to amounts NOT concentrations!  Ex 1.  Two apples per bag = a concentration  Two apples = an amount  Ex 2.  10g per 100 mL = a concentration  10g = an amount

32 From concentrations to amounts  The concentration indicates the amount in a given volume  Ex. 1mM = 1millimole per each liter  Therefore the amount in 1 L is 1 millimole  What volume of solution would you need to have 0.05 millimoles?

33 Agarose Gel Electrophoresis  Separates single stranded or double stranded nucleic acid molecules according to their size and their conformation  Separates fragments between 100pb and 10 Kbp  Resolving power between fragments ≥100pb

34 Migration on an Agarose Gel Well Direction of migration Top (-) Bottom (+) Supercoiled Relaxed Linear

35 What can be determined from an electrophoresis on an agarose gel?  Is there DNA  How many conformations  How many fragments  The size of the fragments  Total size of nucleic acid molecule  The number of cuts  Linear?  Circular?

36 Migration Profile on Agarose Migration distance Log of the size 1.0% 1.5% Resolution

37 Size (bp) Distance (mm) 23,00011.0 9,40013.0 6,50015.0 4,40018.0 2,30023.0 2,00024.0 Fingerprinting Standard Curve: Semi-log Determining sizes


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