| Description | Reducing sugars (RS) are widely present in animals, plants, microorganisms, and cultured cells. Reducing sugars in plants primarily include glucose, fructose, and maltose. Among these, glucose and fructose are not only the main substrates for respiration but also serve as substrates for the further Reducing sugars (RS) are widely present in animals, plants, microorganisms, and cultured cells. Reducing sugars in plants primarily include glucose, fructose, and maltose. Among these, glucose and fructose are not only the main substrates for respiration but also serve as substrates for the further synthesis of sucrose, starch, and cellulose.Detection Principle: In an alkaline solution, 3,5-dinitrosalicylic acid (DNS) can be reduced by reducing sugars to produce a brown-red-colored amino compound, which has a characteristic absorption peak at 540 nm. Within a certain concentration range, the RS content is linearly correlated with the absorbance at 540 nm. The RS content in the sample can be calculated based on a standard curve.Detection Range: 0.05 - 0.6 mg/mLSensitivity: 0.025 mg/mLApplicable Samples: Plant tissues, animal tissues, cells, bacteria, serum (plasma)R1501790Component48T96TStorageR1501790AExtraction Buffer60 mL120 mL2-8℃R1501790BDNS Reagent10 mL20 mL2-8℃. Store in the dark.R1501790CStandard1EA1EA2-8℃Note: Before formal testing, it is recommended to perform a preliminary test with 2-3 samples expected to have significant differences.User-Prepared Instruments and ReagentsMicroplate reader or visible spectrophotometer (capable of measuring absorbance at 540 nm)96-well plate or micro glass cuvettes, adjustable micropipettes and tipsCentrifuge, water bathDeionized waterHomogenizer (for tissue samples)Experimental Procedure1. Reagent PreparationReagent NameReagent PreparationNotesExtraction BufferReady-to-use; Equilibrate to room temperature before use.Store at 4°C. Slightly irritating. Use appropriate personal protective equipment.DNS ReagentReady-to-use; Equilibrate to room temperature before use.Store at 4°C protected from light. Slightly irritating. Use appropriate personal protective equipment.StandardBefore use, add 1 mL of deionized water to dissolve, preparing a 10 mg/mL stock standard solution.Can be stored at 4°C for 2 weeks.2. Standard Curve SetupDilute the 10 mg/mL standard stock solution with deionized water to concentrations of 0.6, 0.5, 0.4, 0.3, 0.2, 0.1, and 0.05 mg/mL.TubeVolume of 10 mg/mL Standard (µL)Volume of Deionized Water (µL)Concentration (mg/mL)Std.1609400.6Std.2509500.5Std.3409600.4Std.4309700.3Std.5209800.2Std.6109900.1Std.759950.05Note: The standard curve must be generated with each experiment. Diluted standard solutions are unstable and must be used within 4 hours.3. Sample Preparation3.1 Plant or Animal Tissue SamplesWeigh approximately 0.1 g of tissue. Add 1 mL of Extraction Buffer and homogenize in an ice bath. Transfer the homogenate to a capped centrifuge tube (to prevent evaporation during heating). Incubate in an 80°C water bath for 40 minutes, vortexing every 5 minutes. Centrifuge at 8,000 g, 25°C for 10 minutes. Collect the supernatant for assay.3.2 Bacteria or CellsCollect bacteria or cells into a centrifuge tube; discard the supernatant. Add 1 mL of Extraction Buffer per 5 million bacteria/cells. Sonicate in an ice bath for 5 minutes (power 20%, pulse 3s on, 10s off, repeat 30 times). Transfer to a capped centrifuge tube (to prevent evaporation during heating). Incubate in an 80°C water bath for 40 minutes, vortexing every 5 minutes. Centrifuge at 8,000 g, 25°C for 10 minutes. Collect the supernatant for assay.3.3 Serum (Plasma) SamplesTake 0.1 mL of serum (plasma) and add 0.9 mL of Extraction Buffer; mix thoroughly. Transfer to a capped centrifuge tube (to prevent evaporation during heating). Incubate in an 80°C water bath for 40 minutes, vortexing every 5 minutes. Centrifuge at 8,000 g, 25°C for 10 minutes. Collect the supernatant for assay.Note:If protein concentration measurement is required, Aladdin's BCA Protein Quantification Kit (B665595) or Ready-to-Use BCA Protein Quantification Kit (R1491648) is recommended. The Extraction Buffer contains components that denature proteins. If calculating based on protein concentration, protein needs to be re-extracted separately for measurement.4. Assay Steps4.1 Preheat the microplate reader or visible spectrophotometer for at least 30 minutes. Set the wavelength to 540 nm. For spectrophotometers, zero the instrument with deionized water.4.2 Assay Procedure:ReagentBlank Tube (µL)Standard Tube (µL)Test Tube (µL)Control Tube (µL)Sample00175175Standard (various conc.)017500Deionized Water17500125DNS Reagent1251251250Mix well. Heat in a boiling water bath for 5 minutes (cap tightly to prevent evaporation). Remove and immediately cool to room temperature. Transfer 200 µL to a 96-well plate or micro glass cuvette. Measure the absorbance at 540 nm. Calculate ΔA test = A test - A control, ΔA standard = A standard - A blank. Note:The Blank and Standard tubes only need to be set up 1-2 times.It is recommended to perform a preliminary test with 2-3 samples expected to have significant differences before the formal experiment. If ΔA <sub> test </sub> is less than 0.04, consider increasing the sample volume appropriately. If ΔA <sub> test </sub> is greater than the ΔA <sub> standard </sub> of the 0.6 mg/mL standard, further dilute the sample with Extraction Buffer (multiply the result by the dilution factor) or reduce the amount of sample used for extraction.5. Calculation of ResultsNote: We provide both the derived formula and a simplified formula. They are equivalent. It is recommended to use the simplified formula in bold for final calculation.5.1 Standard Curve PlottingPlot the standard concentration (y-axis) against ΔA standard (x-axis) to generate the standard curve. Substitute ΔA test into the standard curve equation to calculate y (mg/mL).5.2 Sample Reducing Sugar Content Calculation(1) Based on Sample WeightReducing Sugar (µg/g) = 1000 × y × V<sub>extraction</sub> ÷ W × n = 1000 × y / W × n(2) Based on Sample Protein ConcentrationReducing Sugar (µg/mg prot) =1000 × y × Vextraction ÷ (Vextraction × Cpr) × n=1000 × y / Cpr × n(3) Based on Bacterial or Cell CountReducing Sugar (µg/10⁴) =1000 × y × V<sub>extraction</sub> ÷ 500 × n = 2 × y × n(4) Based on Serum (Plasma) VolumeReducing Sugar (µg/mL) = 1000 × y × Vextraction ÷ Vliquid × n = 10000 × y × nParameter Definitions:1000: Unit conversion factor (1 mg/mL = 1000 µg/mL)V extraction : Volume of Extraction Buffer added (1 mL)V liquid : Volume of serum (plasma) added (0.1 mL)Cpr: Sample protein concentration (mg/mL)W: Sample weight (g)500: Total number of bacteria or cells (5 million)n: Dilution factor6. Representative ResultsTypical Standard Curve: y = 0.2243x + 0.0545, R² = 0.9957 PrecautionsThis product is for research use only. Not for use in clinical diagnosis. For your safety and health, please wear lab coats and disposable gloves during operation... Read More | DescriptionPhoto KitAlysis Starter Kit enables screening of 24 micro-scale simultaneous photocatalytic reactions with consistent and reproducible photon intensity. User guide is provided in the below hyperlink.Photo KitAlysis Operating InstructionsComponents:Photo KitAlysis LED ControllerBlue LED DescriptionPhoto KitAlysis Starter Kit enables screening of 24 micro-scale simultaneous photocatalytic reactions with consistent and reproducible photon intensity. User guide is provided in the below hyperlink.Photo KitAlysis Operating InstructionsComponents:Photo KitAlysis LED ControllerBlue LED Array (470 nm)Photo KitAlysis Reaction BlockTorque screwdriverSmall screwdriver to easily remove torqued screws after reaction is completeFeatures:Designed and tested by synthetic chemists.Controller provides repeatable milliamp selection for photon intensity0-30 mA variable LED output3 different LED options: blue (470 nm, included), green (527 nm, sold separately), and white (sold separately)Non-magnetic LED baseChemically resistant LED coverPTFE coated cablingDesigned to be used withPhoto KitAlysis High-Throughput Reaction Screening Kit(sold separately).Best when used withKitAlysis Benchtop Inertion Box(sold separately)... Read More | Products content S666097Component200 TStorageS666097A5×SuperFast One Step RT-qPCR U+ Buffer1 mL-20℃. Avoid freeze/thaw cycle.S666097BSuperFast One Step U+ Enzyme200 µL-20℃. Avoid freeze/thaw cycle.S666097CRNase-Free Water2×1.5 mL-20℃. Avoid freeze/thaw cycle. Products content S666097Component200 TStorageS666097A5×SuperFast One Step RT-qPCR U+ Buffer1 mL-20℃. Avoid freeze/thaw cycle.S666097BSuperFast One Step U+ Enzyme200 µL-20℃. Avoid freeze/thaw cycle.S666097CRNase-Free Water2×1.5 mL-20℃. Avoid freeze/thaw cycle. Products IntroductionThe SuperFast Probe One Step RT-qPCR U+ Kit is designed for quantitative PCR assays using RNA as a template (e.g., RNA viruses). Using gene-specific primers (GSP), reverse transcription and qPCR reactions are completed in a single tube, eliminating the need for additional tube-opening/pipetting operations, greatly increasing throughput and reducing the risk of contamination. The dUTP/UNG anti-contamination system is introduced in this kit. The heat-sensitive UNG rapidly degrades U-containing contaminants at room temperature; it is rapidly inactivated by reverse transcription at 55°C, without affecting the efficiency and sensitivity of qRT-PCR. Combined with optimized buffer systems and antibody-modified Taq enzymes and mutated M-MLV, the SuperFast Probe One Step RT-qPCR U+ Kit provides sensitivity up to 0.1 pg of total RNA or <10 copies of RNA template and enhanced thermal stability. 5× SuperFast One Step RT-qPCR U+ Buffer contains the following components The 5× SuperFast One Step RT-qPCR U+ Buffer contains an optimized buffer system and dNTP/dUTP Mix, which is particularly suitable for high specificity, low template concentration and multiplexed rapid detection of fluorescently labeled probes such as TaqMan. caveatBefore use, please mix the product gently by turning it up and down after it is completely melted to avoid foaming, and use it after brief centrifugation. Avoid repeated freezing and thawing of the product.ROX dye is used to correct the fluorescence signal error between the quantitative PCR wells, this product does not contain ROX dye, if you need to match the ROX dye with the instrument you are using, please contact your local business or call CombiSense customer service at 4006-222-360. PCR reaction system Attention: (1) Usually, the final primer concentration of 0.2 µM can get better results, and 0.1-1.0 µM can be used as a reference for setting the range. If the amplification efficiency is not high, the concentration of primer can be increased; if non-specific reaction occurs, the concentration of primer can be decreased to optimize the reaction system.(2) The final concentration of the probe used is related to the fluorescence quantitative PCR instrument used, the type of probe, and the type of fluorescent labeling substance, please refer to the instrument manual or the specific requirements for the use of each fluorescent probe to adjust the concentration.3) Because templates from different species contain different numbers of copies of the target gene, the template can be diluted in a gradient to determine the optimal amount of template to usePCR reaction conditionsmovetemptimingcirculatereverse transcription55°C1 min1premutability95°C10s1)1denaturation95°C1 s40-45Annealing/Extension55-60°C2)10-15s3)40-45Attention: (1) The enzyme used in this product is activated under the condition of pre-denaturation at 95℃ for 30s. Under this condition, most of the templates can be well unchained. For templates with high GC content and complex secondary structure, the pre-denaturation time can be extended to 1min, so as to make the starting template fully unchained, and if the high temperature treatment time is too long, it will affect the activity of the enzyme; for simple templates, pre-denaturation time of 1-10s can also be used, and the optimal pre-denaturation time can be determined according to the template situation.(2) It is recommended to use two-step PCR reaction program, the annealing temperature should be 55-60℃ as the reference range, and the annealing temperature can be increased when non-specific reaction occurs. If you can't get good results due to the use of primers with low Tm values or long amplification products, you can try three-step PCR amplification.3) Whether the actual Real Time PCR instrument used supports rapid amplification cycles, please perform a pre-experiment to verify this for the first attempt... Read More | This reagent kit is specially developed for one-step RT-PCR experiments. Reverse transcription and PCR are carried out in the same reaction system, without the need to add reagents or open the tube cap during the reaction process, which improves detection sensitivity and experimental efficiency This reagent kit is specially developed for one-step RT-PCR experiments. Reverse transcription and PCR are carried out in the same reaction system, without the need to add reagents or open the tube cap during the reaction process, which improves detection sensitivity and experimental efficiency while avoiding contamination. This kit includes a brand new high-efficiency reverse transcriptase, a fast hot start DNA polymerase, as well as reaction buffer suitable for reverse transcription and PCR amplification, and other components necessary for the experiment. The loss of activity of SuperRT reverse transcriptase RNase H reduces RNA degradation in reverse transcription reactions. This reverse enzyme has high reverse transcription efficiency and can perform good reverse transcription reactions on a small amount of RNA templates. The rapid hot start DNA polymerase used in PCR reaction has excellent performance of high amplification efficiency, strong specificity, and fast extension speed. The unique buffering system maximizes the efficiency of both reverse transcriptase and polymerase. The target product amplified using this reagent kit has an A base attached to the 3 'end, which can be directly used for T/A cloning.S665660Component100 TStorageS665660ASuperRT OneStep EnzymeMix50 µL-20℃. Avoid freeze/thaw cycle.S665660B2×SuperRT OneStep Buffer1.4 mL-20℃. Avoid freeze/thaw cycle.S665660CRNase-Free Water1.5 mL-20℃. Avoid freeze/thaw cycle. Notes:1. During the operation process, RNase contamination should be avoided to prevent RNA degradation or cross contamination during experiments. It is recommended to perform RNA operations in specialized areas, use specialized instruments and consumables, and have operators wear masks and disposable gloves, and frequently change gloves.2. Disposable plastic containers should be used as much as possible for experiments. If glass containers are used, they should be treated with a 0.1% DEPC (diethyl pyrocarbonate) aqueous solution at 37 ℃ for 12 hours, and sterilized under high pressure at 120 ℃ for 30 minutes before use. Alternatively, glass containers should be sterilized under dry heat at 180 ℃ for 60 minutes before use. The sterile water used in the experiment should be treated with 0.1% DEPC and then subjected to high-pressure sterilization.3. All reagents in this reagent kit should be gently mixed upside down before use, avoiding foaming as much as possible, and used after brief centrifugation. The enzymes involved should be returned to -20 ℃ as soon as possible after use to avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles.4. This reagent kit must use specific primers, and the selection of primers can be based on specific experiments. The quality of primer design directly affects the results of RT-PCR reactions. When designing primers, factors such as GC content, primer length, primer position, and the secondary structure of PCR products need to be considered. It is recommended to use professional primer design software.Usage:1. Dissolve the RNA template, primers, OneStep RT-PCR Buffer, SuperRT OneStep RT-PCR EnzymeMix, and RNase Free Water and place them on ice for later use.2. Prepare the reaction system according to the following table: Reagent 25 µlReaction system Final concentration 2×SuperRT OneStep Buffer 12.5 µl 1× Forward Primer,10 µM 1 µl 0.4 µM Reverse Primer,10 µM 1 µl 0.4 µM SuperRT OneStep EnzymeMix 0.5 µl / RNA Template X µl 1 pg – 1 µg RNase-Free Water up to 25 µl / Attention: The primer concentration should be between 0.1 and 1.0 as the final concentration µ M serves as a reference for setting the range. In the case of low amplification efficiency, the concentration of primers can be increased; When non-specific reactions occur, the primer concentration can be reduced to optimize the reaction system.3. Vortex and shake well, centrifuge briefly, and collect the solution to the bottom of the tube.4. Preheat the thermal cycler to 45 ℃, place the PCR tube in the thermal cycler, and perform RT-PCR reaction.Reaction conditions: Step Temperature Time / Reverse transcription 45℃ 30 min / PCR pre denaturation 95℃ 2 min Denaturation 94℃ 30 s 30-40 cycles Anneal 55-65℃ 30 s 30-40 cycles Extend 72℃ 30 s 30-40 cycles Finally extended 72℃ 5 min /Attention:1) In general PCR experiments, the annealing temperature is 5 ℃ lower than the melting temperature Tm of the amplification primer, and the annealing time is generally 20-30 seconds. If the ideal amplification efficiency cannot be achieved, the annealing temperature should be appropriately reduced; When non-specific reactions occur, increase the annealing temperature to optimize the reaction conditions.2) The extension time is set based on the size of the amplified fragments, and the DNA Polymerase amplification efficiency contained in this product is 1 kb/30s.3) The number of cycles can be set based on the downstream application of the amplification product. Too few cycles, insufficient amplification; Multiple cycles increase the probability of mismatches and result in severe non-specific backgrounds. Therefore, while ensuring product yield, the number of cycles should be minimized as much as possible.5. After the reaction is complete, take 5 µ l of the reaction product, add an appropriate amount of loading buffer, and perform electrophoresis detection results... Read More | Product content: U665923Component50 T200 TStorageU665923ABuffer GTL15 mL60 mLRTU665923BBuffer GL15 mL50 mLRTU665923CBuffer GW1 (concentrate)13 mL52 mLRTU665923DBuffer GW2 (concentrate)15 mL70 mLRTU665923EBuffer GE15 mL60 mLRTU665923FProteinase K1.25 mL4×1.25 mLRTU665923GSpin Columns DM with Product content: U665923Component50 T200 TStorageU665923ABuffer GTL15 mL60 mLRTU665923BBuffer GL15 mL50 mLRTU665923CBuffer GW1 (concentrate)13 mL52 mLRTU665923DBuffer GW2 (concentrate)15 mL70 mLRTU665923EBuffer GE15 mL60 mLRTU665923FProteinase K1.25 mL4×1.25 mLRTU665923GSpin Columns DM with Collection Tubes50 EA200 EART Product Introduction:This reagent kit is suitable for extracting high-purity total DNA from various samples such as fresh or frozen animal tissues, cells, blood, bacteria, etc. This product can purify DNA fragments with a maximum molecular weight of 50 kb. The purification process does not require the use of toxic solvents such as phenol or chloroform, nor does it require ethanol precipitation. This reagent kit adopts an optimized buffer system to efficiently and specifically bind DNA from the lysis solution to the silica matrix centrifuge adsorption column. Inhibitors of PCR and other enzymatic reactions can be effectively removed through a two-step washing step. Finally, high-purity DNA can be obtained by washing with low salt buffer or water. The purified DNA can be directly used for downstream experiments such as enzyme digestion, PCR, Real Time PCR, library construction, Southern Blot, and molecular labeling.Self prepared reagent: anhydrous ethanolEnzymatic Lysis Buffer (preparation required for extracting genomic DNA from Gram positive bacteria).Self prepared reagent: Enzymatic Lysis Buffer Formula: 20 mM Tris, pH 8.0; 2 mM Na2 EDTA; 1.2% Triton self prepared reagent: X-100; Lysozyme with a final concentration of 20 mg/mL.Preparation and important precautions before the experiment:1. Samples should avoid repeated freeze-thaw cycles, otherwise it may result in smaller extracted DNA fragments and a decrease in extraction volume.2.If extracting the genome of bacterial cultures with a large accumulation of secondary metabolites or thick cell walls, it is recommended to collect samples early in the logarithmic growth phase.3.Before the first use, anhydrous ethanol should be added to Buffer GW1 and Buffer GW2 according to the instructions on the reagent bottle label.4. Before use, please check if there is any crystallization or precipitation in Buffer GTL and Buffer GL. If there is any crystallization or precipitation, please dissolve Buffer GL and Buffer GTL again in a 56 ℃ water bath.5. If downstream experiments are sensitive to RNA contamination, 4 can be added before adding Buffer GL µ RNase A of L DNase Free (100 mg/mL) was not provided in this kit.Operation steps:Genome extraction from blood and cell samples1. Material processing1a If the extracted material is mammalian anticoagulant blood (non nucleated red blood cells), it can be directly directed to 50-200 µ Add Buffer GTL to fresh or frozen anticoagulant blood samples to supplement up to 200 µ L;1b If the extracted material is anticoagulant blood from poultry, birds, amphibians, or lower level organisms, and their red blood cells are nucleated cells, take 5-10 µ L fresh or frozen anticoagulant blood samples, add Buffer GTL to supplement up to 200 µ L;1c The cells cultured on the wall should be first processed into a cell suspension (with a maximum extraction amount of 5 × 10 cells), centrifuged at 2000 rpm (400 × g) for 5 minutes, discarded from the supernatant, and added with 200 µ L GTL, oscillate until the sample is completely suspended;Note: To remove RNA, add 4 after completing the above steps µ RNase A solution with a concentration of 100 mg/mL was vortexed for 15 seconds and left at room temperature for 2 minutes.2. Add 20 µ L Protein K.3. Add 200 µ L Buffer GL, vortex oscillation thoroughly mixed, 56 ℃ water bath for 10 minutes.4. Temporarily centrifuge to remove water droplets from the inner wall of the tube cover. Join 200 µ L anhydrous ethanol, vortex and shake thoroughly to mix well. Short centrifugation.Attention: 1) After adding Bu ff er GL and anhydrous ethanol, immediately vortex shake and mix well.2) The addition of Bu ff er GL and anhydrous ethanol may produce white precipitates, which will not affect subsequent experiments. Some organizations may form sol-gel products after adding Bu ff er GL and anhydrous ethanol, and it is recommended to perform severe shaking or vortex treatment at this time.5. Add all the solutions obtained in the previous step to the spin columns DM that have been loaded into the collection tube. If the solution cannot be added at once, it can be transferred multiple times. Centrifuge at 12000 rpm (~13400 × g) for 1 minute, discard the waste liquid in the collection tube, and place the adsorption column back into the collection tube.6. Add 500 to the adsorption column µ L Buffer GW1 (check if anhydrous ethanol has been added before use), centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 1 minute, discard the waste liquid in the collection tube, and place the adsorption column back into the collection tube.7. Add 500 to the adsorption column µ L Buffer GW2 (check if anhydrous ethanol has been added before use), centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 1 minute, discard the waste liquid in the collection tube, and place the adsorption column back into the collection tube.Note: To further improve DNA purity, repeat step 7.8.12000 rpm for 2 minutes and discard the waste liquid from the collection tube. Place the adsorption column at room temperature for a few minutes to thoroughly air dry.Note: The purpose of this step is to remove residual ethanol from the adsorption column, which can affect subsequent enzymatic reactions (such as enzyme digestion, PCR, etc.).9. Place the adsorption column in a new centrifuge tube (provided by oneself) and add 50-200 to the middle of the adsorption column in the air µ L Buffer GE or sterilized water, leave at room temperature for 2-5 minutes, centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 1 minute, collect DNA solution, and store DNA at -20 ℃.Attention:1) If downstream experiments are sensitive to pH or EDTA, they can be washed off with sterilized water. The pH value of the eluent has a significant impact on the elution efficiency. If water is used as the eluent, its pH value should be ensured to be between 7.0-8.5 (NaOH can be used to adjust the pH value of the water to this range). When the pH value is below 7.0, the elution efficiency is not high.2) Preheating the GE in a water bath at 65-70 ℃ and incubating it at room temperature for 5 minutes before centrifugation can increase yield; Use an additional 50-200 µ Re washing with GE or sterilized water can increase yield.3) If the final concentration of DNA needs to be increased, the obtained solution can be re added to the adsorption column, left at room temperature for 2-5 minutes, and centrifuged at 12000 rpm for 1 minute; If the elution volume is less than 200 µ L. It is possible to increase the final concentration of DNA, but it may reduce the total yield. If the amount of DNA is less than 1 µ g. Recommended 50 µ Wash with GE or sterilized water.4) Because DNA stored in water is affected by acidic hydrolysis, if long-term preservation is required, it is recommended to elute with Bu ff er GE and store at -20 ℃.Genome extraction from animal tissues1. Material processingIf the extracted material is animal tissue, take 25 mg (the amount of spleen tissue should be less than 10 mg); If the material is mouse tail, take a section of rat tail with a length of 0.4-0.6 cm or two sections of mouse tail with a length of 0.4-0.6 cm.1a. After liquid nitrogen grinding or cutting the sample into small pieces, place it in a 1.5 mL centrifuge tube and add 180 mL µ Label different samples with L Buffer GTL.1b If using a homogenizer to process the sample, add no more than 80% of the homogenizer to the sample before homogenization µ L Buffer GTL, add 100 after homogenization µ L Buffer GTL.Attention:1) Ensure that the quantity of each organization does not exceed the recommended range.2) The tissue samples can be ground with liquid nitrogen or homogenized with a homogenizer before adding Bu ff er GTL, which can increase the cracking efficiency.2. Add 20 µ L Protein K, vortex oscillation thoroughly mixes the sample. Take a 56 ℃ water bath until the tissue is completely lysed. During the incubation process, the centrifuge tube can be inverted or shaken periodically to disperse the sample.Attention:1) The digestion time varies for different tissues, usually taking 1-3 hours to complete. The tail of the mouse needs to be digested for 6-8 hours, and if necessary, overnight digestion will not affect subsequent operations.2) If there is still gel like substance after incubation and vortex oscillation, extend the incubation time at 56 ℃ or add another 20 µ L Protein K digestion.3) To remove RNA, add 4 after completing the above steps µ RNase A solution with a concentration of 100 mg/mL, vortex for 15 seconds, and leave at room temperature for 5-10 minutes.3. Add 200 µ L Buffer GL, vortex shake thoroughly and mix well, take a water bath at 70 ℃ for 10 minutes. Add 200 after brief centrifugation µ L anhydrous ethanol, vortex and shake thoroughly to mix well.Attention:1) After adding Bu ff er GL and anhydrous ethanol, immediately vortex and shake to mix well.2) The addition of Bu ff er GL and anhydrous ethanol may produce white precipitates, which will not affect subsequent experiments. Some tissues (such as the spleen and lungs) may form sol-gel products after adding Bu ff er GL and anhydrous ethanol. In this case, it is recommended to perform vigorous shaking or vortex treatment.4. Centrifuge briefly and add all the solution obtained in step 3 to the spin columns DM that have been loaded into the collection tube. If the solution cannot be added at once, it can be transferred multiple times. Centrifuge at 12000 rpm (~13400 × g) for 1 minute, discard the waste liquid in the collection tube, and place the adsorption column back into the collection tube.5. Add 500 to the adsorption column µ L Buffer GW1 (check if anhydrous ethanol has been added before use), centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 1 minute, discard the waste liquid in the collection tube, and place the adsorption column back into the collection tube.6. Add 500 to the adsorption column µ L Buffer GW2 (check if anhydrous ethanol has been added before use), centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 1 minute, discard the waste liquid in the collection tube, and place the adsorption column back into the collection tube.Note: To further improve DNA purity, repeat step 6.7.12000 rpm for 2 minutes and discard the waste liquid from the collection tube. Place the adsorption column at room temperature for a few minutes to thoroughly air dry.Note: The purpose of this step is to remove residual ethanol from the adsorption column, which can affect subsequent enzymatic reactions (such as enzyme digestion, PCR, etc.).8. Place the adsorption column in a new centrifuge tube (provided by oneself) and add 50-200 to the middle of the adsorption column in the air µ L Buffer GE or sterilized water, leave at room temperature for 2-5 minutes, centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 1 minute, collect DNA solution, and store DNA at -20 ℃.Attention:1) If downstream experiments are sensitive to pH or EDTA, they can be washed off with sterilized water. The pH value of the eluent has a significant impact on the elution efficiency. If water is used as the eluent, its pH value should be ensured to be between 7.0-8.5 (NaOH can be used to adjust the pH value of the water to this range). When the pH value is below 7.0, the elution efficiency is not high.2) Preheating the GE in a water bath at 65-70 ℃ and incubating it at room temperature for 5 minutes before centrifugation can increase yield; Use an additional 50-200 µ Re washing with GE or sterilized water can increase yield.3) If the final concentration of DNA needs to be increased, the obtained solution can be re added to the adsorption column, left at room temperature for 2-5 minutes, and centrifuged at 12000 rpm for 1 minute; If the elution volume is less than 200 µ L. It is possible to increase the final concentration of DNA, but it may reduce the total yield. If the amount of DNA is less than 1 µ g. Recommended 50 µ Wash with GE or sterilized water.4) Because DNA stored in water is affected by acidic hydrolysis, if long-term preservation is required, it is recommended to elute with Bu ff er GE and store at -20 ℃. i ii Genomic extraction of blood and cell samples1. Bacterial sample pretreatment1a Gram negative bacteria(1) Take 1-5mL of bacterial culture (10 ^ -10 ^ cells, up to a maximum of 2 × 10 ^ cells) and place it in a centrifuge tube (self prepared). Centrifuge at 12000 rpm (~13400 × g) for 1 minute and try to aspirate the supernatant as much as possible.(2) Add 180 to the precipitate µ L Buffer GTL, shake to suspend bacterial weight.(3) Join 20 µ L Protein K, vortex mix well, incubate at 56 ° C until the bacterial cell is completely lysed, and during the incubation process, invert or shake the centrifuge tube periodically to disperse the sample.Note: To remove RNA, add 4 after completing the above steps µ L RNase A solution with a concentration of 100 mg/mL, shake well and let stand at room temperature for 5-10 minutes.(4) Join 200 µ L Buffer GL, vortex oscillation mixing.1b Gram positive bacteria(1) Take 1-5 mL of bacterial culture (10 ^ -10 ^ cells, maximum not exceeding 2 x 10 ^ cells) and place it in a centrifuge tube (self prepared). Centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 1 minute and try to aspirate the supernatant as much as possible.(2) Join 180 µ L Enzymatic Lysis Buffer (self provided) suspends the bacterial weight.(3) Incubate at 37 ℃ for 30 minutes.(4) Join 20 µ L Protein K vortex oscillation, thoroughly mixed. Join 200 µ L Buffer GL, vortex oscillation mixing. Incubate at 56 ℃ for 30 minutes.Attention:1) If necessary, incubation at 95 ° C for 15 minutes can inactivate the pathogen, but incubation at 95 ° C can cause some DNA degradation.2) To remove RNA, add 4 after completing the above steps µ L RNase A solution with a concentration of 100 mg/mL, shake well and let stand at room temperature for 5-10 minutes.2. Add 200 µ L anhydrous ethanol, vortex and shake thoroughly to mix well.Attention: Adding anhydrous ethanol may produce white precipitates, which will not affect subsequent experiments.3. Add all the solution obtained from step 2 (including the formed precipitate) to the adsorption column (Spin Columns DM) that has been loaded into the collection tube. If the solution cannot be added at once, it can be transferred multiple times. Centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 1 minute, discard the waste liquid in the collection tube, and place the adsorption column back into the collection tube.4. Add 500 to the adsorption column µ L Buffer GW1 (check if anhydrous ethanol has been added before use), centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 1 minute, discard the waste liquid in the collection tube, and place the adsorption column back into the collection tube.5. Add 500 to the adsorption column µ L Buffer GW2 (check if anhydrous ethanol has been added before use), centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 1 minute, discard the waste liquid in the collection tube, and place the adsorption column back into the collection tube.Note: To further improve DNA purity, repeat step 5.6.12000 rpm for 2 minutes and discard the waste liquid from the collection tube. Place the adsorption column at room temperature for a few minutes to thoroughly air dry.Note: The purpose of this step is to remove residual ethanol from the adsorption column, which can affect subsequent enzymatic reactions (such as enzyme digestion, PCR, etc.).7. Place the adsorption column in a new centrifuge tube (provided by oneself) and add 50-200 to the middle of the adsorption column in the air µ L Buffer GE or sterilized water, leave at room temperature for 2-5 minutes, centrifuge at 12000 rpm for 1 minute, collect DNA solution, and store DNA at -20 ℃.Attention:1) If downstream experiments are sensitive to pH or EDTA, they can be washed off with sterilized water. The pH value of the eluent has a significant impact on the elution efficiency. If water is used as the eluent, its pH value should be ensured to be between 7.0-8.5 (NaOH can be used to adjust the pH value of the water to this range). When the pH value is below 7.0, the elution efficiency is not high.2) Preheating the GE in a water bath at 65-70 ℃ and incubating it at room temperature for 5 minutes before centrifugation can increase yield; Use an additional 50-200 µ Re washing with GE or sterilized water can increase yield.3) If the final concentration of DNA needs to be increased, the obtained solution can be re added to the adsorption column, left at room temperature for 2-5 minutes, and centrifuged at 12000 rpm for 1 minute; If the elution volume is less than 200 µ L. It is possible to increase the final concentration of DNA, but it may reduce the total yield. If the amount of DNA is less than 1 µ g. Recommended 50 µ Wash with GE or sterilized water.4) Because DNA stored in water is affected by acidic hydrolysis, if long-term preservation is required, it is recommended to elute with Bu ff er GE and store at -20 ℃... Read More |