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Dotte

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    Biochemistry

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Lepton

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  1. Well indeed. Its a very broad view and I find it weird they add them to the list if "interactions". Its a bit confusing and not very specific.
  2. Ah yes, I see what you mean. It does mean that they have an effect on eachother, but it does not mean (necessary) that the proteins interact wich eachother (physically)?
  3. Hallo all, I am checking a website (to check protein-protein interactions) and I have a problem understand what they mean with "genetic" vs "physical "interactions. See, for example, http://www.yeastgenome.org/locus/S000002706/interaction You can see a list with interaction and an interaction overview. But I have troubles understanding what they mean with "physical" and "genetic" interactions. The physical ones, I get: protein protein interactions in the cell as they are. But the "genetic" one, I am not 100% sure I get it. They explain it like this: (http://www.yeastgenome.org/help/function-help/interactions) Physical interactions are defined as the direct physical binding of two proteins, or co-existence in a stable complex, whereas genetic interactions are interactions between two or more mutants. For more details about BioGRID's curation process, see here. So what does this mean? A genetic interaction is an interaction proven after mutating one gene (protein) this first protein has another (stranger/other) effect after they changed a second gene as well. So by mutating a second gene they notice that the first one is also acting different compared to when its not mutated or mutated alone. Is this correct or ? Anyone that can elaborate on this? Thanks in advance
  4. Hello all, Has anyone here every noticed something weird when doing a LR reaction in terms of getting some sort of mixture of plasmids? Like some sort of hybrid plasmid or multiple plasmids in 1 "cel" ? I get a very low efficiency after the LR reaction (only a few cells per plate). Which is already a sign something is off. The destination vector/donor vector are fine, but after the LR reaction I get only a few colonies and when I sequence them I get something really strange. I use 3 primers: 1 primer on my destination vector before the GOI (primer 1) going through this GOI, the attb2 site and further on. 1 primer after my GOI on the destination vector going in the opposite direction (primer 2). 1 primer on the GOI , going towards my destination vector , going to the attb1 site (primer 3). The first 2 primers give me what I want: Primer 1: piece of my destination (now expression vector) , attb1 site, followed by the GOI and the attb2 site and my vector. Primer 2: piece of my destination vector , attb2 site, followed by the GOI and the attb1 site. The above primers, "added" together give me: destination vector - attb1 - GOI - attb2 - destination vector. So far so good. However: using primer 3 (that binds in my GOI) I get : GOI followed by a little piece of the attb1 site and then the donor vector... This makes no sense to me. Do I have some sort of hybrid plasmid? But how is this possible? Or do I have a mixture of plasmids? But this seems also weird since its from a single colony (I hardly have any colonies on my plate anyway so its really form a single CFU). I know that something is wrong since I only get a few colonies per LR reaction after plating, but I really do not get this hybrid/weird plasmid. A note: when checking the quality of the sequenced results from the primer that binds my GOI (primer 3) I do see that the peaks are not good when I reach the attb1 site (when it goes from GOI to the donor vector rather than expression vector). So I am guessing I have 2 plasmids rather than 1. Anyone an insight in this?
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