DirectPCR Lysis Reagent (Mouse Tail) 100ml | 102-T

(1 review) Write a Review
SKU:
102-T
Size:
100 mL
лв430.01

 Select your currency from the header

Description

DirectPCR® DNA Extraction System is a single-tube system for rapid preparation of DNA from mouse tails, ear pieces, yolk sac, and culture cells. The patent-pending components developed by scientists at Biotech Inc. allow the resulting DNA extracts to be compatible with genomic PCR for genotyping. Crude extracts of biological samples are not compatible with many molecular biology-grade reactions such as polymerase chain reaction (PCR), in part due to inhibitors contained in crude extracts. The DirectPCR reagents not only mediate the rapid lysis of biological samples but also contain inhibitors that effectively suppress the inhibitory activities of crude lysates for PCR amplification, while maximally maintaining the integrity of released genomic DNA. The patent-pending simple procedure completely eliminate any solution transfer or tube-opening steps, providing you with substancial extra time.

DirectPCR Lysis Reagent (Mouse Tail) DataSheet

Brief procedure
1.  Lyse tails in DirectPCR® Lysis Reagent.
2.  Incubate for 45 min at 85°C.
3.  PCR genotyping with 1 μl lysates.

Detailed protocols:  Tail, Ear, Yolk Sac, and Cultured cells.

DirectPCR® system offers advantages over conventional protocols that include:
· Time saving: Less hands-on time. Crude tail lysates for PCR.
· Money saving: Cost-effective reactions.
· Safe: No organic reagents.
· Environmental: Less waste (organic reagents, tubes, tips, etc...)
· Reliable and efficient: Virtually 100% success rate with high yields.

DirectPCR Lysis Reagent (mouse tail)

101-T 50ml (250 mouse tails).

102-T 100ml (500 mouse tails).

View AllClose

1 Review

  • 5

    gDNA preparation

    Posted by Lieven Gevaert Gentaur on 10th Jul 2024

    DirectPCR Lysis Reagents for preparing genomic DNA (gDNA) efficiently. This method releases DNA from tissues without purification steps, allowing direct use in PCR for genotyping. It works on various samples, including mouse tails, ears, yolk sacs, and cultured cells. This approach simplifies and speeds up the gDNA preparation process.

View AllClose