1 / 8

DNA EXTRACTION VIDEO

DNA EXTRACTION VIDEO. Video creation and design By Michael Cochran-Boucher And Melissa Quinn Source: Utah.edu/Home DNA Extraction Lab. First, find a source of DNA, such as: Spinach Strawberries Broccoli Examples of DNA not to use, such as: Your family pet, Fido the dog

meghan
Télécharger la présentation

DNA EXTRACTION VIDEO

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DNA EXTRACTION VIDEO Video creation and design By Michael Cochran-Boucher And Melissa Quinn Source: Utah.edu/Home DNA Extraction Lab

  2. First, find a source of DNA, such as: • Spinach • Strawberries • Broccoli • Examples of DNA not to use, such as: • Your family pet, Fido the dog • Your little sister’s big toe • Bugs caught in the yard

  3. Start: Step 1 Pause video: to read instructions • Set up the blender!!! • Add ½ cup of split peas (100ml) • Add 1 cup of water (200ml) • Add 1/8th teaspoon table salt • Blend for 30 seconds on Puree • Separate pea-cell soup • Pour mixture through strainer into glass container (discard strained solid peas) • Add 30ml liquid detergent to mixture and swirl • Let stand for 5-10 minutes • Pour Mixture into small glass containers (about a third full)

  4. Step 2 • Add the ENZYMES (virtual protein scissors), such as: • Meat tenderizer (a pinch to each container) • Pineapple juice • Contact lens cleaning solution • Stir each container gently(30-60 seconds) • Stirring to hard may break up the DNA strands making them harder to see

  5. Step 3 • Alcohol Separation: • Tilt test tube and slowly pour rubbing alcohol down the side • Watch for a layer to form • Broccoli • Examples of DNA not to use, such as: • Your family pet, Fido the dog • Your little sister’s big toe • Bugs caught in the yard

  6. Finish: Step 4 • “DNA is a long, stringy molecule. The salt that you added in step one helps it stick together. So what you see are clumps of tangled DNA molecules!”“DNA normally stays dissolved in water, but when salty DNA comes in contact with alcohol it becomes undissolved. This is called precipitation. The physical force of the DNA clumping together as it precipitates pulls more strands along with it as it rises into the alcohol.”““You can use a wooden stick or a straw to collect the DNA. If you want to save your DNA, you can transfer it to a small container filled with alcohol.” • Source: Utah.edu What is that Stringy Stuff?

More Related