Cost is comparable to PCR, 3x amount of primers, Bst polymerase from NEB, isothermal temp controlled device
On Jul 3, 2012 4:09 AM, "Pieter" <pietervanboheemen@gmail.com> wrote:
-- The papers I've seen on LAMP look very promissing. Especially this one on malaria: http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0013733
I'd like to read some more about the inhibitory effects that have been described when samples are not completely purified. I can imagine that 6 primers make the reaction more sensitive to polutants. Also the economic performance of the method is unclear to me (e.g. how much does it cost?).
Does anyone have a good reference to an article where these parameters are studied? I'd love to learn more about it!
On Monday, 2 July 2012 15:22:14 UTC+2, Cathal wrote:LAMP is an awesome method for on-site PCR, but (speaking as someone who--
*hasn't* tried it) seems to be harder to optimise and design for
general-purpose DNA amplification.
That is, standard PCR is better for prototyping a reaction, but for
creating a protocol for general or regular use, LAMP is probably a good
next step; as you point out, it requires little in the way of
instrumentation, and because there's no cycling of temperature, that's a
huge source of experimental error removed! Awesome for walk-by workshops
for DNA testing etc..
On 02/07/12 10:59, Marc Dusseiller wrote:
> hei garage biologists,
>
> just saw some interesting low-cost stuff at a conference in kenya. you know
> about LAMP? seems like a great and cheap alternative to pcr, especially on
> the instrumentation side.
>
> http://www.plosntds.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pntd.0000147
>
> more stuff from low-cost diagnostics soon,
> marc
>
--
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