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CharonY

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Everything posted by CharonY

  1. Actually from what how I understand it, it is slightly similar to the German system. Essentially everyone is obligated to have some kind of health insurance. These come in two flavors, the private health insurers and the statutory health insurers. The latter have to take everyone in and those that cannot afford it are subsidized by the state. The private one usually offer more (e.g. you can get single bed rooms in hospitals or get to choose the senior physician over juniors. It is a rather expensive system, especially if unemployment is high, as all unemployed have to be taken in by the statutory insurers. However, if you income is at the lower end you will get all necessary treatments fairly fast. If resources are limited privately insured patients will get (unofficially) treated faster, though.
  2. 99.9% of these numbers are pulled from thin air.
  3. Introns are also have regulatory effects and supposed to stabilize essential domains. For higher eukaryotes the costs for additional DNA elements in form of introns is arguably not that high (when compared to the overall metabolite content of a given organism). This is not true for very small single-cell organisms (all prokaryotes for example). In these there is a selective pressure towards compact genomes (as here DNA replication can be one of the limiting factors of growth rates.
  4. From what I know Freud is more of historical interest for modern psychology. He gave essential inputs in his time, but psychology/psychoanalysis moved on from there. Some of the most basics tenets have still a (limited) validity though. Much that he developed from that is considered too crude or inaccurate nowadays. Also I am not aware that he proposed any religious dualities at all. Are you thinking of the superego/ego/it trinity? This was more a model than anything else.
  5. I assume it is one of the kits which utilizes biotin-(strept)avidin-conjugates for visualization of the DNA. I usually just use cy-labeled oligos for PCR (easier, more direct and non-radioactive, saves paper work). EtBr staining is a good idea, though. I was just thinking, the OMP does not happen to bind to biotin, does it?
  6. Drinking cold drinks will also close the pores on your skin thus inhibiting transpiration.
  7. I need a bit clarification first. You have a purified OMP for the shift with the biotinylated DNA and you use (strept)avidin conjugate for Chemiluminescence? 1st question: is the OMP known to have a specific DNA binding site (I am a bit unfamiliar with that concept as I usually only do shifts with TFs). And the following happened: 1) you increase OMP concentration, but not DNA -> intensity reduction 2) you add unlabeled but specific DNA (constant protein concentration)-> no intensity change 3) you add unspecific unlabeled DNA (control) with constant protein conc -> no intensity change Did I follow you so far? 2nd question: do you only observe a single band in all EMSAs? My quick'n dirty interpretation: If I assume that no technical errors occured (e.g. during chemiluminescence detection) then it is no sufficient proof for DNA-protein interaction. First, of course, because no shift happened (d'oh). Second, because the control (adding specific unlabelled DNA) did not result in an intensity shift (displacement from regulator). The strangest part is possibly the reduction of intensity by adding the protein. It is possible, that the protein in fact binds the DNA, however for some reasons the DNA-protein complex did not migrate into the gel. In that case an increase of prot would deplete the DNA, whereas increase of DNA wouldn't change much as you'd only see unbound DNA in the gel in the first place.
  8. Well, I have no intention of buying these books, so I can only comment it from the summaries. They are disturbing, of course as they try to put politics and religion into natural science and some of their proponents are even scientists themselves (though thankfully rather seldom biologists). On the other hand, since when was science fully free of politics? Grants position etc. are not always purely based on scientific achievements. There is never too much coffee.
  9. Well it depends how sterile the surrounding is and how the air movements are. If you want to store them you can put your petri dishes in a larger jar that can be sealed, sterilize them within the jar and then seal it after sterilization. For short term you can sterilize the dish in an oven then let it stand in it until agar is done.
  10. Simply put, most complex traits including those often rather imprecise defined ones as "personality" are in part genetically defined (e.g. sensitivity of certain receptors to their cognate hormones) but are also shaped by the environment. Just as a thought, maybe a person is susceptible to certain stress hormones resulting in stronger aggressive behaviour under stress. However, same person learns to avoid stress situations (or not to perceive certain events as stress, or lives in an environement with less stressors...) and thus given personality trait is not exhibited.
  11. Well, to sterilize glass wares you got two options. Sterilize them in a steam cooker (I am not sure how much pressure a normal steam cooker can build up. It is possible that they do not sterilize completely), or you can just bake them at at least 180°C for ~12 hours. Usually agar and dishes are sterilized independently, and then you pour the agar under sterile condition into the dishes.
  12. Ah, well too late to answer then. But if memory serves in denatured gels the speed is roughly equal (would make sense if both are linear ss, of course). However in PAGE (as opposed to agarose) 22bp can be resolved. You can clean-up DNAseI treated RNA with columns w/o phenol extraction, btw.
  13. - structure of micro-organisms very complex -culturing micro-organisms sometimes a huge pain in the lower back -life processes of micro-organisms essentially all that are feasible
  14. In theory yes, however the field created within the oven is quite inhomogenous. Very small particles (as bacteria) can quite easily be missed.
  15. fats store more energy than polysaccarides (or rather the metabolization of these are more efficient than sugar oxidation).
  16. Yeah it is not precisely my field of expertise but when I read the first paper (Takahashi and Yamanaka) I was pretty excited. My first thought, however was that hopefully it wouldn't be a fraud case (as Hwang). But now that more papers are popping up also from another group (and due to the ease of actually creating them), the hopes are high. Of course these cells are not as stable as embryonic ones, due to the fiddling in their transcription machinery, but an important thing nonetheless. Bloody hell, this stuff fascinated me so much that I actually sound like a salesman.
  17. Hmm maybe I understand a bit better what you mean now (but then, maybe not ;P) I assume that may main problem with your reasoning and my focus in forces vs. structure is this from your OP: These sentences consists of a number of different assumptions that, at least to me do not sum up. Therefore I will try to ignore what I assume to be inconsistencies and try harder to get what you mean (yeh, I am probably thick-headed). Anyway, what I do not understand yet is what you mean with geometry? Do you mean structure? And do you mean identifying given structures in nature or about creating them, as e.g. in nanotechlogical applications? Or are you more interested mathematical modeling of said structures? Anyway, I still got to read the pdf first, when I got more time. Will get back to you then.
  18. Pure ELISAs are possible, though often not that fast (due to washing steps and so on). Mostly hybrids (immunochromatograhphic) assay are used, as in pregnancy tests. They take roughly 5 minutes and are the fastest I am aware of. Essentially you put urine in a device which essentially contains a vial and a strip. The urine m(mobile phase) igrates along the strip (as normal thin-film chromatography). On the strip you have got immobilised drug conjugates as well as a THC directed antibody-dye conjugate. If you don't have drugs, the antibody-dye conjugate binds to the drug-conjugate and this will result in a colouring, due to the dye. On the other hand, if drugs are present in the urine, they saturate the antibody-dye-conjugates and thus do not bind to the immobilized drug conjugates. This will result in absence of colour.
  19. Yups. With exception of pathogenic invasive strains and maybe lesions in the gut epithelia.
  20. Ehm, not really. It prevents agar from overboiling during the cooldown. You usually open autoclaves between 80 and 90°C, temperatures at which agar is still very liquid. They solidify roughly ~40°C.
  21. I think you are completely on the wrong boat. See, a C60 simply consists of, well carbon. Capsids however are proteins, a far more complex composition. Check the original paper in which the crystal structure is resolved. The geometry of the phage heads is thus governed by the amino acid sequence. There are other viruses that have different architectures (e.g. retroviruses) which thus likely do not share the same common ancestors as T4 and related phages. Comparing an evolved protein structure with fullerens, even if they should share geometrical similarities is like assuming that there must be a common force between tennis balls and oranges. You are confusing very different things here.
  22. To be honest, I do not quite get what you mean. Viral capsules usually build themselves via self-assembly. This means that the information of how to assemble themselves is already provided by the proteins which constitute these capsules themselves. The authors you cite (Fokine et al; btw it is easier if you provide links btw ) have noted that tailed phages (in particular T4 and HK97) share a similar structure in the capsule, which they share with some eukaryotic viruses. So similar structures (and also assume conserved domains) hint that dsDNA containing phages might share a common ancestor. Thus I do not understand your reasoning, as phage capsids are complex structures (as proteins go) and are not random molecules "pressed together" by some geometrical forces, as it might be interpreted from your post (at least I did). Change the amino acid sequence and you won't obtain a capsule. Judging from the link that you have given the patent is about the construction plans for a macroscopic construction unit. I fail to see the connection except for rough similarities. Like, say comparing golf balls to apples.
  23. Actually an autoclave is not much hotter per se. The main trick is that it maintains overpressure allowing liquids to be heated up to 120° C. Essentially it is a steamcooker. Essentially you can use one to sterilize your media.
  24. Microwaving at least in normal ovens is comparatively inefficient. Cooking agar in it for instance is not much more (if at all) more efficient than normal cooking. The heating is too heterogenous. Also, for efficient sterilization you need heating above 100° C, which only work with some overpressure. You can for instance try to moisture your dishes and then cook it for around 20 minutes. Agar will dry in that time, though. However, in all theses cases I still would only uses these to grow fast growing bacteria. It is very unlikely that they will be completely sterile.
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