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  Pellet Paint® Co-Precipitant
Cat. No. 69049  
All Categories » Novagen » PCR and Cloning » PCR Clean-up and Nucleic Acid Precipitation » Pellet Paint®Co-Precipitant
Product Description

Pellet Paint® Co-Precipitant is a visible dye-labeled carrier formulated specifically for use in alcohol precipitation of nucleic acids (McCormick 1995, McCormick 1996). The two-minute precipitation uses just 2 µl per reaction and requires no low-temperature incubations or prolonged centrifugation. Both RNA and DNA are efficiently precipitated from even dilute solutions (2 ng/ml) and the pellet is easily located by its vivid pink color. The pellet can be easily followed during washing steps and prevents losses during handling.

Most applications of PCR benefit from a clean-up step in which primers and other reactants are removed and the target DNA is concentrated (Taggart 1998). Pellet Paint Co- Precipitant is ideal for this cleanup because the procedure is rapid, primers < 50 nt in length are efficiently removed, and the DNA is quantitatively recovered. Furthermore, it is easy to tell when the DNA has been completely resuspended following the precipitation step.

Pellet Paint Co-Precipitant is compatible with most molecular biology procedures and is free of contaminating nucleic acids and nucleolytic enzymes. Although it absorbs in the UV range, accurate spectrophotometric measurements of DNA or RNA samples are possible; the absorbance ratio (provided with each package) can be used as a correction factor when determining nucleic acid concentration (McCormick 1996). Pellet Paint Co-Precipitant is compatible with automatted Cy5® sequencers. Pellet Paint NF Co- Precipitant is recommended for use with PE Applied Biosystems automated sequencers.



Features and Benefits:
• Direct visualization and tracking of precipitated material

References:
McCormick, M. 1995. inNovations 4a, 10. McCormick, M. 1996. inNovations 5, 10. Taggart, E. W., et al. 1998. J. Clin. Microbiol. 36, 3408.

Note: Euorpean Patent No. EP0853680 has been issued to EMD Biosciences, Inc./Novagen for a method for precipitating nucleic acid with a visible carrier. US Patent pending.

Components:
250 µl or 2 mlPellet Paint Co-Precipitant
1 ml or 8 ml3 M Sodium Acetate, pH 5.2
 

Need additional information about this product? Email our Technical Service department at: novatech@novagen.com

 Related information for this product is available:

EMD Chemicals Inc. EUR list price is displayed (pricing with local distributors may vary). NOTE: In Stock status is based on item availability worldwide.

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69049-3125 rxnY€78
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Related Products:
69049: Pellet Paint® Co-Precipitant
70748: Pellet Paint® NF Co-Precipitant
70976: SpinPrep™ PCR Clean-up Kit

Related Literature:

Novagen inNovations Newsletter 26

PCR Tools Brochure

Material Safety Data Sheets:
69049: Pellet Paint® Co-Precipitant - English
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Related Categories:
All Categories » Novagen » Nucleic Acid Purification » Nucleic Acid Precipitation
All Categories » Novagen » PCR and Cloning » PCR Clean-up and Nucleic Acid Precipitation » Pellet Paint®Co-Precipitant

Selected Citations:
  1. Christopher L. Brooks, Muyang Li and Wei Gu. (2007) Mechanistic studies of MDM2-mediated ubiquitination in p53 regulation. Journal of Biological Chemistry 282, 22804-22815.
  2. Mark P. Buttner, et al. (2007) Evaluation of two surface sampling methods for detection of Erwinia herbicola on a variety of materials by culture and quantitative PCR. Applied and Enviornmental Microbiology 73, 3505-3510.
  3. Roy E. Halling, Timothy J. Baroni and Manfred Binder. (2007) A new genus of Boletaceae from eastern North America. Mycologia 99, 310-316.
  4. Shu Quan, et al. (2007) The CXXC motif is more than a redox rheostat. Journal of Biological Chemistry 282, 28823-28833.
  5. Chun J. Tsai, Sunny A. Kim and Gilbert Chu. (2007) Cernunnos/XLF promotes the ligation of mismatched and noncohesive DNA ends. Procedings of the National Academy of Science 104, 7851-7856.
  6. James E. Nowak, et al. (2006) Direct production and purification of T7 phage display cloned proteins selected and analyzed on microarrays. Bio/Techniques 40, 220-227.
  7. Youn-Soo Lee, et al. (2005) Coexpression of erythropoietin and erythropoietin receptor in von Hippel-Lindau disease-associated renal cysts and renal cell carcinoma. Clinical Cancer Research 11, 1059-1064.
  8. Takuji Mori, et al. (2005) Predictive utility of circulating methylated DNA in serum of melanoma patients receiving biochemotherapy. Journal of Clinical Oncology 23, 9351-9358.
  9. Laura C. Pendleton, et al. (2005) Regulation of endothelial argininosuccinate synthase expression and NO production by an upstream open reading frame. Journal of Biological Chemistry 280, 24252-24252.
  10. Timothy V. Beischlag, et al. (2004) Recruitment of thyroid hormone receptor/retinoblastoma-interacting protein 230 by the aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator is required for the transcriptional response to both dioxin and hypoxia. Journal of Biological Chemistry 279, 54620-54628.

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