[Home]Agarose gel electrophoresis

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Agarose gel electrophoresis is a method used in molecular biology to separate DNA strands by size, and to determine the size of the separated strands by comparison to strands of known length.

Material

For an agarose gel electrophoresis, several items are needed:

Preparation

  1. Make a 1% agarose solution in 0.5x TBE. If you analyze small DNA strands, go up to 2%. Use 15-70 ml, depending on the size of the gel.
  2. Boil solution, preferably in a microwave.
  3. Let the solution cool down to about 60°C at room temperature. Stir the solution while cooling.
  4. Add 1 ml ethidium bromide on each 10 ml gel solution. Wear double gloves or nitrile gloves from here on, ethidium bromide is a mutagen!
  5. Stir the solution to disperse the ethidium bromide, then fill it into the gel rack.
  6. Insert the comb at one side of the gel, about 5-10 mm from the border of the gel.
  7. When the gel has cooled down and became solid, remove the comb. The holes that remain in the gel are the slots.
  8. Put the gel, together with the rack, into a chamber with 0.5x TBE. Make sure the gel is completely covered with TBE, and that the slots are at the electrode that will have the negative current.
  9. Add the color marker to the DNA. The DNA ladder is usually already stained.

Procedure

Inject the DNA ladder and the DNA into a slot each. Don't use more DNA solution than the slot can hold, usually 25 ml. Apply the electric current (usually 100 V for 30 minutes for a 15 ml gel). When the colored "front wave" reaches the end of the gel, stop the current. The color may leave the gel.

Figure 1 : Schematic drawing of the electrophoresis process. (Image in the PD).
(1) The agarose gel with three slots (S).
(2) Injection of DNA ladder into the first slot.
(3) DNA ladder injected. Injection of samples into the second and third slot.
(4) A current is applied. The DNA moves toward the positive current.
(5) Small DNA strands move fast, large DNA strands move slowly through the gel. The DNA is not normally visible during this process, so the marker dye is added to the DNA to avoid the DNA being run entirely off the gel. The marker dye has a low molecular weight, and migrates faster than the DNA, so as long as the marker has not run past the end of the gel, the DNA will still be in the gel.
(6) The DNA is spread over the whole gel. The electrophoresis process is finished.

Illuminate the gel with a UV lamp (usually on a light box) to view the DNA bands- ethidium bromide fluoresces pink in the presence of DNA. Wear protective glasses! The DNA can also be cut out of the gel, and can then be dissolved to retrieve the purified DNA.

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Last edited November 23, 2001 10:38 pm by Malcolm Farmer (diff)
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