All posts by takahide
[Inquiry] SNPs analysis
Thanks for an inquiry!!
“I am currently looking for a lab, where I can get samples genotyped for SNPs with the TaqMan Assay. Is there any chance you provide these services?”
Of course, YES, we are!! For both mouse and human samples, we perform the TaqMan probe assay on the qPCR and analyze the genotyping.
Please contact us and discuss about it.
DNA Tests to Match Dog Poop to Catch Owners at New Jersey Condo Complex
New instrument helps speed up genotyping
A new instrument for analyzing DNA and RNA is now helping advance rice research at IRRI.
The fragment analyzer, now in use at IRRI’s new Genotyping Services Lab (GSL), helps improve the genotyping of molecular markers linked to specific rice traits that can be used to breed better varieties. It does capillary electrophoresis and can run 96 samples in about 90 minutes, and is thus expected to speed up laboratory work.
Michael Thomson, molecular geneticist and marker applications specialist at IRRI, said that they decided on the fragment analyzer after careful review. “The instrument met our critical requirements, which are mainly throughput and reduced hands-on time to improve laboratory workflow and, ultimately, reduce the time it takes to get results.”
The installation of the fragment analyzer is part of a larger effort to upgrade facilities for the GSL. The instrument was supplied by a U.S.-based Advanced Analytical Technologies, Inc.
Speedier Mouse Models
5 Tips to Help You Get PCR Automation Right
8 Reasons Labs Rely on Digital and Quantitative PCR
Find out what roles both qPCR and dPCR play in today’s academic, industry, and clinical research labs.
George Karlin-Neumann, Ph.D. , Rachel Scott, Ph.D.
Isothermal PCR Gets Off The Dime
Two companies aim to make PCR and its need for thermal cycling instrumentation obsolete.
Is this potential technique replaceable from the current PCR system? It is so interesting me.
Forensic genetic SNP typing of low-template DNA and highly degraded DNA from crime case samples
Source
Section of Forensic Genetics, Department of Forensic Medicine, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Frederik V’s Vej 11, DK-2100, Copenhagen, Denmark. Electronic address: claus.boersting@forensic.ku.dk.
Abstract
Heterozygote imbalances leading to allele drop-outs and disproportionally large stutters leading to allele drop-ins are known stochastic phenomena related to STR typing of low-template DNA (LtDNA). The large stutters and the many drop-ins in typical STR stutter positions are artifacts from the PCR amplification of tandem repeats. These artifacts may be avoided by typing bi-allelic markers instead of STRs. In this work, the SNPforID multiplex assay was used to type LtDNA. A sensitized SNP typing protocol was introduced, that increased signal strengths without increasing noise and without affecting the heterozygote balance. Allele drop-ins were only observed in experiments with 25pg of DNA and not in experiments with 50 and 100pg of DNA. The allele drop-in rate in the 25pg experiments was 0.06% or 100 times lower than what was previously reported for STR typing of LtDNA. A composite model and two different consensus models were used to interpret the SNP data. Correct profiles with 42-49 SNPs were generated from the 50 and 100pg experiments, whereas a few incorrect genotypes were included in the generated profiles from the 25pg experiments. With the strict consensus model, between 35 and 48 SNPs were correctly typed in the 25pg experiments and only one allele drop-out (error rate: 0.07%) was observed in the consensus profiles. A total of 28 crime case samples were selected for typing with the sensitized SNPforID protocol. The samples were previously typed with old STR kits during the crime case investigation and only partial profiles (0-6 STRs) were obtained. Eleven of the samples could not be quantified with the Quantifiler™ Human DNA Quantification kit because of partial or complete inhibition of the PCR. For eight of these samples, SNP typing was only possible when the buffer and DNA polymerase used in the original protocol was replaced with the AmpFℓSTR(®) SEfiler Plus™ Master Mix, which was developed specifically for challenging forensic samples. All the crime case samples were successfully typed with the SNPforID multiplex assay and the match probabilities ranged from 1.1×10(-15) to 7.9×10(-23). In comparison, four of the samples could not be typed with the AmpFℓSTR(®) SEfiler Plus™ kit and the match probabilities were higher than 10(-7) for another six samples.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
Magnetic nanoparticles-based extraction and verification of nucleic acids from different sources
Source
State Key Laboratory of Bioelectronics, School of Biological Science and Medical Engineering, Nanjing 210096, P R. China.
Abstract
In many molecule biology and genetic technology studies, the amount of available DNA can be one of the important criteria for selecting the samples from different sources. Compared with those genomic DNA methods using organic solvents or other traditional commercial kits, the method based on magnetic nanoparticles (MNPs) and adsorption technology has many remarkable advantages like being time-saving and cost effective without the laborious centrifugation or precipitation steps, and more importantly it has the great potential and especially suitable for automated DNA extraction and up-scaling. In this paper, the extraction efficiency of genomic nucleic acids based on magnetic nanoparticles from four different sources including bacteria, yeast, human blood and virus samples are compared and verified. After measurement and verification of the extracted genomic nucleic acids, it was shown that all these genomic nucleic acids extracted using the MNPs method can be of high yield and be available for next molecule biological steps.