Promega Corporation

Molecular Weight Markers

Cost-effective alternative to ethidium bromide and SYBR® Gold! Start collecting with Promega restriction enzymesTry our cheeky, little promotion!Less than half the price of Amersham ECL!

Molecular Weight Markers Resources

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Molecular Weight Markers 9507CA
Make Running Agarose Gels More Convenient!

Supplied in a stabilizing solution of 1X Blue/Orange Loading Dye, the BenchTop Markers offer the convenience of room-temperature storage and direct loading onto agarose gels.

Featured Products

Diamond Dye....a brilliant cut!

Diamond™ Nucleic Acid Dye provides a robust method for staining many gel types, along with the convenience of room temperature stability. It's more sensitive than ethidium bromide, so you use less sample and ladders for visualisation, saving you money with every gel you run.

Comparable in performance to SYBR® Gold, it is compatible with denaturing and native agarose and polyacrylamide gels and can be imaged with any standard imaging system.

Diamond™ Nucleic Acid Dye does not require prewashing or destaining of gels.

Try Diamond Dye now for half price, that's just £27.50 for 500μl !

It's an automatic discount so to get Diamond Dye at half price please just order H1181!

Offer ends October 31st 2013.

DNA Step Ladders

Ladders of defined sizes with exact incremental steps between bands. Step Ladders with 10, 25, 50, 100, 200, or 1,000 base pair increments are available.

Protein Markers

Broad Range Protein Molecular Weight Markers contain nine bands of 10, 15, 25, 35, 50, 75, 100, 150 and 225kDa. For reference, the 50kDa band is at greater intensity.

DNA Ladders

The PCR Markers (50-1,000bp), 100bp DNA Ladder (100-1,000bp) and 1Kb DNA Ladder (250-10,000bp) offer defined size markers with higher intensity bands for convenient sizing.

Featured Resources

profilesindna_fr Why Use a Size Marker and Allelic Ladders in STR Analysis?

This article describes how size markers are used to calculate the length of amplified fragments, confirm reproducibility and provide information on lane-to-lane variation in electrophoretic migration.

pubhub_fr What percentage agarose is needed to sufficiently resolve my DNA sample?

This article gives guidelines on the percent agarose used to resolve DNA of various sizes.

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