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tag art cloning innovation

PCR Based Cloning Kits: Something For Everybody
Laura Defrancesco | Apr 12, 1998 | 10+ min read
Date: April 13, 1998PCR Based Cloning Kits Table The End Table (PDF Format) PCR has found applications in almost every imaginable facet of molecular biology, and for many applications, looking at a band on a gel is not enough. Sequencing, expressing, mutating--all require cloning. And as it happens, cloning strategies that work for other types of DNA fragments don't work at all well, or require inordinate effort, with PCR fragments. For example, the most commonly used cloning strategy requires
Fishing In A Molecular Sea
Alison Paladichuk | Jan 17, 1999 | 10+ min read
Date: January 18, 1999Labeling Kit Companies Labeling Kit Companies: Details In situ spatial localization of mRNA expressed only after ethylene treatment (left) compared to air grown seedlings used as a negative control (right). The RNA probe to the EIA0305 gene was labeled with fluorescein (NEL633) and visualized with NBT (Image courtesy of New England Nuclear) Remember the days when fishing for a sequence in the E. coli genome seemed like an overwhelming task? Somewhere along the way, it see
Human Clinical Trials Begin For Cervical Cancer Vaccines
Steve Bunk | Oct 26, 1997 | 6 min read
Efforts are under way to develop a vaccine against one of the world's deadliest illnesses, cervical cancer. Along with a number of university research laboratories, at least a half-dozen biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies are beginning clinical trials or are in preclinical development of such drugs. Efficacy in humans remains to be firmly established, but if the vaccines progress to later-phase trials, challenging jobs for immunologists, microbiologists, and biochemists will multiply. "
Mafia Wars
Jef Akst | May 31, 2010 | 10+ min read
An increasing amount of data is showing that the cellular battle between pathogens and hosts needs much more than a simple military metaphor to describe it—think undercover infiltration, front organizations, and forced suicide.
Today's Lab
Laura Defrancesco | Mar 3, 2002 | 8 min read
Tom Sargent remembers the day a student in his lab forgot to add boiling chips to phenol before firing up the heater on the distillation apparatus, and the panicked shouting and tearing off of the lab coat, goggles, gloves, and shoes that ensued when the phenol superheated and boiled over. "Fortunately he wasn't hurt," said Sargent, now chief of the section on vertebrate development at the National Institute of Child and Human Development, "but what a mess." Then, there was the time he hooked up

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