Sincerly,
Bryan
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Hi! In the USA there is a brand of alcohol called "Everclear" which is available as 95% alcohol (190 proof) and 75.5% (151 proof). In some states the 95% cannot be sold, but most states it can. I would see if your parents can buy this at the liquor store. I think the majority of the sales of this brand is to scientists who need 95% ethanol for experiments.bryanandsebastian wrote:We have no 95% ethanol in the stores to use. They don't sell it commercialy. We've seen in other research that they use 91% isopropyl
We've found that the difference is that there is more water in this one. By the way what's the control in this experiment.The teacher says it should be a known source of DNA to compare to our results. How do we know that what we are extracting is real DNA? We know that the answer is that the muccus we get is the DNA, but she keeps asking us for the control. For example in "which is the best mouthwash" the control is distilled water. Or the control is the experiment itself???
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Thanks,
Bryan and Sebastian
You need to start thinking about what each step in the extraction process is actually accomplishing.When I put the chopped onion mixture into the blender do I need to add some water or do I leave it how it is. So then after blending I just put it into the measuring cup with the salt, detergent, and 100ml of dH2O.
No, I'm was just trying to get you to think things through yourself. If you use a blender to do the chopping, I would recommending you only put in onion (or whatever you are testing) and not add any water and that you measure the mass (weight) of what you take out of the blender instead of what you put into it if knowing how much onion (or whatever) you started with is important to measurements for your hypothesis.I think that your telling me not to use a blender but chop with a knife, right?
I believe you said you live in Florida. If that is the situation, I don't think you can purchase 190 proof grain alchohol (95% ethanol) for human consumption. Because the alchohol is used in the very last step of this extraction proceedure, it probably doesn't matter if it is ethanol or isopropyl given that people have posted success with both. Using the highest percent alcohol that you can and keeping it cold appear to be more important than ethanol vs isopropyl.My dad will get grain alcohol at the liquor store. Is this ok
I was trying to inform you that this DNA extraction proceedure might not work very well for things besides onion. Chemical extraction steps are all about eitherWhat do you mean about "contaminating my extracted DNA or interfere with the extraction. "
Lets do a pretend experiment with pretend results to illustrate: If you mashed up a small piece of banana and pressed it into the bottom of a test tube, then only the top surface of the clump would have cells exposed to the chemicals used to break down the cell walls. The number of cells whose walls broke would be small compared to the total number of banana cells in the tube. If the cell walls don't break, the DNA inside won't end up in the final separation. You could easily end up with less than 1 percent of the banana cell walls broken. This means you could only extract less than 1 percent of the DNA."If you break down different percentages of different cell types, then your idea of measuring ratios of extracted DNA to starting cell mass may render any conclusions meaningless."
Plants and animals have cells made of different chemicals (as well as different ratios of similar chemicals). For example, one chemical that is found in plants but not animals is cellulose. (This is why wood is so hard; the cell walls have cellulose in them). The goal of this prep is to extract only one type of chemical and discard all the rest. If "all the rest" are different, they will require different protocols, ad Craig found when he researched this topic. The methods for preparing the plant vs. animal cells are very different. Even within plants the method you found may not work for all types of cells.bryanandsebastian wrote:Hey Craig,
I'm wondering why these procedures for the onion method won't work with the chicken liver. We haven't done it yet but, we're are trying to do fish eggs, chicken eggs, and chicken liver. Also we would like to try yeast. Again thanks for the help and all your advice.
I don't think you need EDTA for the onion project. You should read the instructions carefully. As for what EDTA is, please read what I provided above and am quoting below again:Angelia9289 wrote:i need some help i have decided to do this experiment for science fair can someone please tell me what is EDTA? my title of my project is Will DNA survive seperated from a cell component? this has something invoving an onion
This article talks about EDTA. If you want more information, wikipedia also has an article just about EDTA.10 mL 0.5M EDTA pH 8.0- this is a chelator and binds metals ions, of which there are many in cells (both plant and animal)
See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tris for information on these first two ingredients.