Marcadores de ARN Millennium™
Marcadores de ARN Millennium™
Invitrogen™

Marcadores de ARN Millennium™

Los marcadores de ARN Ambion® Millennium™ están diseñados para proporcionar una determinación precisa del tamaño de las transcripciones de ARNMás información
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Número de catálogoCantidad
AM715050 μl
Número de catálogo AM7150
Precio (CLP)
302.971
Each
Añadir al carro de la compra
Cantidad:
50 μl
Pedido a granel o personalizado
Precio (CLP)
302.971
Each
Añadir al carro de la compra
Los marcadores de ARN Ambion® Millennium™ están diseñados para proporcionar una determinación precisa del tamaño de las transcripciones de ARN monocatenario de 0,5 a 9 kb y pueden usarse en cualquier protocolo northern. Se proporcionan suficientes marcadores para 25 carriles de gel northern. Son una mezcla de 10 transcripciones de ARN discretas con tamaños fáciles de recordar: 0,5, 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 3, 4, 5, 6 y 9 kilobases. Los marcadores pueden teñirse con bromuro de etidio durante o después de la electroforesis. Debido a su cantidad y espaciado uniforme, estos marcadores son ideales para construir curvas estándar muy precisas para la determinación del tamaño del ARNm. También proporcionan una escala de referencia para facilitar la verificación y comparación de bandas conocidas. El 1–2 µg (1–2 µg) de marcadores de ARN Millennium™ generarán 10 bandas distintas en un gel de agarosa desnaturalizante al 1 % con tinción de bromuro de etidio. Todos los lotes marcadores se someten a pruebas de nucleasas estrictas y se demuestra que son estables durante la noche a 37°C.
Para uso exclusivo en investigación. No apto para uso en procedimientos diagnósticos.
Especificaciones
Concentración1 μg/μl
Compatibilidad del gelGeles que contienen formaldehído, geles de agarosa desnaturalizantes
Línea de productosAmbion, Marcadores del Milenio
Tipo de productoMarcador de ARN
Cantidad50 μl
Listo para cargarNo
Condiciones de envíoHielo seco
Intervalo de tamañosDe 0,5 a 9 kb
Unit SizeEach
Contenido y almacenamiento
Almacenar por debajo de -70 °C.

Preguntas frecuentes

Why are my RNA bands not sharp?

(1) RNA was not completely denatured. Electrophorese RNA under denaturing conditions. Use urea, formamide or formaldehyde gels, or glyoxal-treated RNA.

(2) For glyoxal-treated RNA, a buffer gradient formed during electrophoresis. Recirculate buffer during electrophoresis to prevent gradient formation.

What is the cause of extra bands when using an RNA ladder?

Extra bands appear in RNA Ladders for a few reasons:

(1) RNA was not completely denatured. Electrophorese RNA under denaturing conditions. Use urea, formamide or formaldehyde gels, or glyoxal-treated RNA.

(2) Extra bands may be a result of using formaldehyde that is not fresh; the pH becomes acidic in older formaldehyde. In our hands, when fresh formaldehyde with neutral pH was used, the extra bands disappeared.

(3) Alternatively, if the extra bands appear after hybridization, it could be that the gel purified probe contains contaminating vector DNA (pUC or pBR) that hybridizes to RNA Ladder template DNA.

Why are some of the RNA marker bands not visible?

Missing RNA bands may be due to:

(1) A small amount of RNA diffused out of gel during extended destaining. Minimize destaining time. Destaining for 2 hours is sufficient for most applications.

(2) RNA bands of similar molecular size were not resolved. Use the correct gel type and denaturing conditions.

Why are the RNA bands disappearing when looking and photographing a gel on a UV box?

RNA was exposed to UV light for extended periods of time. Minimize exposure to UV light. Stain and destain gels in the dark and photograph the gel immediately.

Why are the RNA marker bands so faint?

Many factors could affect the intensity of the bands as summarized below.

(1) Insufficient RNA was loaded on the gel. Increase the amount of RNA loaded.

(2) RNA was degraded. Avoid nuclease contamination of the RNA standards. Store RNA at -70 degrees C in formamide. Deionize formamide and glyoxal, store aliquots at -20 degrees C.

(3) RNA was electrophoresed off the gel. Electrophorese the gel for less time, at a lower voltage, or in a higher percentage gel.

(4) For ethidium bromide-stained RNA, improper UV light source was used. Use short-wavelength (254 nm) UV light. For ethidium bromide-stained RNA, improper staining and destaining conditions were used. Stain in the dark with 5 mg/mL ethidium bromide. For thin (3.2 mm) formaldehyde gels, stain 5 min and destain 1 h. For thicker gels, stain 30 min and destain 2 hr. To reduce background staining, use 0.66 M formaldehyde instead of 2.2 M formaldehyde in gels. For glyoxal RNA gels, stain and destain in 0.5 M ammonium acetate to help reduce background staining.

(5) For radiolabeled RNA, an improper labeling method was used.