[Histonet] In situ PCR

2013-10-08 Thread Sarah Dysart
Anyone out there do this? If so, during the PCR step you are amplifying your gene of interest, where does the amplified product go? Each step of the PCR (from how I am understanding this...I'm new to molecular biology protocols...) separates the double stranded sequence then copies it, and

Re: [Histonet] In situ PCR

2013-10-08 Thread E. Wayne Johnson 朱稳森
We don't do in-situ PCR, but the principle is that with formalin-fixed tissues your amplified product is trapped in the protein matrix on the slide. On 3:59, Sarah Dysart wrote: Anyone out there do this? If so, during the PCR step you are amplifying your gene of interest, where does the