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Merck
CN

R4268

RNA Sample Loading Buffer

for NA electrophoresis, with ethidium bromide (50 μg/mL)

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About This Item

UNSPSC Code:
12161703
NACRES:
NA.25
MDL number:
Technical Service
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grade

Molecular Biology

Quality Level

form

liquid

concentration

1.25 ×

technique(s)

electrophoresis: suitable

foreign activity

RNase, none detected

storage temp.

−20°C

General description

RNA loading buffer is used as a tracking dye during RNA electrophoresis. The RNA loading dye has a slight negative charge and will migrate the same direction as RNA, allowing the user to monitor the progress of molecules moving through the gel. The rate of migration varies with gel composition. Dilute 1:3 to 1:6 with sample, heat to 65C for ten minutes and chill on ice before loading.

Application

Suitable for use with formaldehyde-agarose gels used in Northern blotting procedures.
RNA Sample Loading Buffer has been used as a sample loading buffer in northern blot.
RNA sample loading buffer is especially formulated for electrophoresis of RNA on formaldehyde-agarose gels with or without ethidium bromide. Ethidium bromide is not recommended for gel staining prior to Northern blot detection because the presence of ethidium bromide in agarose gels or the loading buffer can cause poor transfer efficiency.

Preparation Note

Deionized formamide 62.5% (v/v), formaldehyde 1.14 M, bromphenol blue 200 μg/mL, xylene cyanole 200 μg/mL, MOPS-EDTA-sodium acetate at 1.25× working concentration.
Recommended usage: Add 1 volume sample to 2-5 volumes of sample loading buffer and mix well. The sample should be heated to 65 °C for 10 minutes, and then chilled on ice immediately before loading on the gel.

Other Notes

Deionized formamide 62.5% (v/v), formaldehyde 1.14 M, bromphenol blue 200 μg/mL, xylene cyanole 200 μg/mL, MOPS-EDTA-sodium acetate at 1.25× working concentration.


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pictograms

Exclamation markHealth hazard

signalword

Danger

Hazard Classifications

Acute Tox. 4 Inhalation - Carc. 1B - Muta. 2 - Repr. 1B - Skin Sens. 1 - STOT RE 2 Oral

target_organs

Blood

Storage Class

6.1C - Combustible, acute toxic Cat.3 / toxic compounds or compounds which causing chronic effects

wgk

WGK 3

flash_point_f

Not applicable

flash_point_c

Not applicable



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Dennis L Stevens et al.
The Journal of infectious diseases, 195(2), 202-211 (2006-12-28)
Extracellular protein toxins contribute to the pathogenesis of a wide variety of Staphylococcus aureus infections. The present study investigated the effects that cell-wall active antibiotics and protein-synthesis inhibitors have on transcription and translation of genes for Panton-Valentine leukocidin, alpha-hemolysin, and
Impact of antibiotics on expression of virulence-associated exotoxin genes in methicillin-sensitive and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.
Stevens DL, et al.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 195, 202-211 (2007)
Erika C von Grote et al.
Molecular bioSystems, 7(1), 150-161 (2010-08-24)
Cytokines are important mediators of the wound healing response. However, sampling of cytokines from the interstitial fluid at a healing wound site in experimental animals is a challenge. Microdialysis sampling is an in vivo collection option for this purpose as



Global Trade Item Number

SKUGTIN
R4268-5VL04061836695262