MAX Efficiency™ DH5α-T1R Competent Cells
MAX Efficiency&trade; DH5&alpha;-T1<sup>R</sup> Competent Cells
Invitrogen™

MAX Efficiency™ DH5α-T1R Competent Cells

MAX Efficiency DH5α T1 Phagen-resistente kompetente Zellen sind hocheffiziente chemisch kompetente Zellen zur Erzeugung von cDNA-Bibliotheken. Zusätzlich zur Unterstützung derWeitere Informationen
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KatalognummerMenge
120340135 x 200 μl
Katalognummer 12034013
Preis (EUR)
232,65
Online Exclusive
240,00
Ersparnis 7,35 (3%)
Each
Zum Warenkorb hinzufügen
Menge:
5 x 200 μl
Preis (EUR)
232,65
Online Exclusive
240,00
Ersparnis 7,35 (3%)
Each
Zum Warenkorb hinzufügen
MAX Efficiency DH5α T1 Phagen-resistente kompetente Zellen sind hocheffiziente chemisch kompetente Zellen zur Erzeugung von cDNA-Bibliotheken. Zusätzlich zur Unterstützung der Blau-Weiß-Screenings erhöhen die recA1 und endA1 Mutationen in DH5α die Insert-Stabilität und verbessern die Qualität der Plasmid-DNA, die aus Minipreps gewonnen wird. MAX Efficiency DH5α T1 Phagen-resistente kompetente Zellen ergeben >1 × 109 Transformanten/µg Monomer pUC19 DNA in einer 100 µl-Transformationsreaktion.
Nur für Forschungszwecke. Nicht zur Verwendung bei diagnostischen Verfahren.
Specifications
Bakterielle AntibiotikaresistenzNo
Blau-Weiß-ScreeningJa
Klonierung methylierter DNANein
Klonierung instabiler DNANicht geeignet zum Klonen instabiler DNA
Enthält F'-EpisomF'-Episom fehlt
Hochdurchsatz-KompatibilitätNicht mit hohen Durchsatz kompatibel (manuell)
Verbessert die PlasmidqualitätJa
Vorbereitung von nicht methylierter DNANicht geeignet für die Vorbereitung von nicht methylierter DNA
ProduktlinieDH5a, MAX Efficiency
ProdukttypKompetente Zelle
Menge5 x 200 μl
Reduziert RekombinationJa
VersandbedingungTrockeneis
T1-Phage – resistent (TonA)Ja
TransformationsleistungsgradHoher Wirkungsgrad (> 10^9 cfu⁄µg)
FormatRörchen
SpeziesE. coli
Unit SizeEach
Inhalt und Lagerung
Lagerung im Ultra-Tiefkühlgerät (-68 bis -85 °C).

Häufig gestellte Fragen (FAQ)

How do you recommend that I prepare my DNA for successful electroporation of E. coli?

For best results, DNA used in electroporation must have a very low ionic strength and a high resistance. A high-salt DNA sample may be purified by either ethanol precipitation or dialysis.

The following suggested protocols are for ligation reactions of 20ul. The volumes may be adjusted to suit the amount being prepared.

Purifying DNA by Precipitation: Add 5 to 10 ug of tRNA to a 20ul ligation reaction. Adjust the solution to 2.5 M in ammonium acetate using a 7.5 M ammonium acetate stock solution. Mix well. Add two volumes of 100 % ethanol. Centrifuge at 12,000 x g for 15 min at 4C. Remove the supernatant with a micropipet. Wash the pellet with 60ul of 70% ethanol. Centrifuge at 12,000 x g for 15 min at room temperature. Remove the supernatant with a micropipet. Air dry the pellet. Resuspend the DNA in 0.5X TE buffer [5 mM Tris-HCl, 0.5 mM EDTA (pH 7.5)] to a concentration of 10 ng/ul of DNA. Use 1 ul per transformation of 20 ul of cell suspension.

Purifying DNA by Microdialysis: Float a Millipore filter, type VS 0.025 um, on a pool of 0.5X TE buffer (or 10% glycerol) in a small plastic container. Place 20ul of the DNA solution as a drop on top of the filter. Incubate at room temperature for several hours. Withdraw the DNA drop from the filter and place it in a polypropylene microcentrifuge tube. Use 1ul of this DNA for each electrotransformation reaction.

You offer competent cells in Subcloning Efficiency, Library Efficiency and MAX Efficiency. How do these differ?

There are a few exceptions, but in general the difference is in guaranteed transformation efficiency as follows:

Subcloning Efficiency cells are guaranteed to produce at least 1.0 x 10E6 transformants per µg of transformed pUC19 or pUC18 supercoiled plasmid
Library Efficiency cells are guaranteed to produce at least 1.0 x 10E8 transformants per µg pUC19 or pUC18 DNA
MAX Efficiency cells are guaranteed to produce at least 1.0 x 10E9 transformants per µg pUC19 or pUC18 DNA

Do any Invitrogen competent cells contain DMSO in the freezing medium?

Yes, several of our competent cells products are frozen with DMSO. The presence of DMSO (dimethylsulfoxide) will generally be indicated in the MSDS files if you have a question about a particular product, but here is a list of commonly used products that are known to have DMSO in the freezing buffer:

One Shot OmniMAX 2 T1 Phage Resistant Cells, Cat. No. C8540-03

One Shot INV?F' Chemically Competent Cells, Cat. No. C2020-03 and C2020-06

One Shot MAX Efficiency DH5?-T1 Chemically Competent Cells, Cat. No. 12297-016

MAX Efficiency DH5?-T1 Phage Resistant Cells, Cat. No. 12034-013

MAX Efficiency DH5? Chemically Competent Cells, Cat. No. 18258-012

Library Efficiency DH5? Chemically Competent Cells, Cat. No. 18263-012

MAX Efficiency DH5? F'IQ Cells, Cat. No. 18288-019

MAX Efficiency Stbl2Chemically Competent Cells, Cat. No. 10268-019

When should DMSO, formamide, glycerol and other cosolvents be used in PCR?

Cosolvents may be used when there is a failure of amplification, either because the template contains stable hairpin-loops or the region of amplification is GC-rich. Keep in mind that all of these cosolvents have the effect of lowering enzyme activity, which will decrease amplification yield. For more information see P Landre et al (1995). The use of co-solvents to enhance amplification by the polymerase chain reaction. In: PCR Strategies, edited by MA Innis, DH Gelfand, JJ Sninsky. Academic Press, San Diego, CA, pp. 3-16.

Additionally, when amplifying very long PCR fragments (greater than 5 kb) the use of cosolvents is often recommended to help compensate for the increased melting temperature of these fragments.

Find additional tips, troubleshooting help, and resources within our PCR and cDNA Synthesis Support Center.