Mashup RT Beta Update #1

Published: April 19th, 2019   Last Modified: February 19th, 2020

Mashup Reverse Transcriptase (RT) was released less than half a year ago and many researchers have come forward to become beta testers. I am eternally grateful to everyone who took their time, effort and funding to express Mashup-RT.

I am pleased to say that due to the efforts of you wonderful people that the project is quickly maturing. Mashup-RT is not only active, but seems capable of holding its own against commercial offerings, which was the original objective.

This post is a compilation of feedback/purification protocols I’ve received, so that new testers can have a better starting point than I have in my original post, which is outdated. As well, I will be posting results of my own purification, which is coming soon.

Let’s get right into it, shall we? Plasmids were sent out, and here is the feedback we have so far. There are edits purely for readability, and the researchers have been given credit. If there are mistakes, or if you want a link to a lab website, please get in touch! Click on the contributors name to read their thoughts on purifying Mashup/other RTs!

Grzegorz Brzyżek and other Szymon Swieżewski lab members (Pictures AND DATA!!!)

Mein Deutscher Freund
(Pictures AND DATA!!!)

Ryan Nai

Ye Yang

Sergey

Colin from the Soriano Lab!

Thank you all again! I will be getting an extra pair of hands to help out for the next few months so I will be applying all the feedback into a large scale purification. Updates of me catching up to the testers to follow!

Here’s our take on the Mashup purification and buffer optimization!

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