Ethidium Bromide: Difference between revisions

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 Ethidium Bromide, commonly used during gel electrophoresis in molecular biology labs, is a fluorescent tag which intercalates with double-stranded DNA and RNA (due to it's tendancy to fold back on itself and create localised sections of Watson-Crick interaction, and emits an orange glow when under UV light.
Ethidium Bromide, commonly used during [[gel electrophoresis|gel electrophoresis]] in molecular biology labs, is a fluorescent tag which intercalates with [[DsDNA|double-stranded DNA]] and [[RNA|RNA]] (due to it's tendancy to fold back on itself and create localised sections of [[Watson-Crick|Watson-Crick]] interaction, and emits an orange glow when under [[UV|UV]] light.

Revision as of 17:38, 23 October 2012

Ethidium Bromide, commonly used during gel electrophoresis in molecular biology labs, is a fluorescent tag which intercalates with double-stranded DNA and RNA (due to it's tendancy to fold back on itself and create localised sections of Watson-Crick interaction, and emits an orange glow when under UV light.