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Xenobio's avatar

When I was a young Masters student, I wondered why the price of molecular grade agarose was 500x that of grocery store agar. I tried taking some from my kitchen to the lab, boiled it in TAE (Tris, acetate, EDTA buffer) and tried running a DNA gel on it. The bands came out all wiggly and blurred. Not surprisingly, it's much less homogenous!

I'm curious as to how they separate out the different molecular weights/gel pore sizes of molecular biology grade agar. Is that inherent to what's being synthesized by the algae and dependent on species and growth conditions, or is there a separation process during manufacturing?

Sébastien Simoncelli's avatar

Also, the bit about agar being “standard” so it’s hard to replace feels painfully familiar. Even if you find a better material, you’re fighting protocols, comparability, and the inertia of decades of literature. The tech constraint isn’t just chemistry, it’s the ecosystem around it.

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