Description

Book Synopsis

Provides the basic laboratory skills and knowledge to pursue a career in biotechnology. Written by four biotechnology instructors with over 20 years of teaching experience, it incorporates instruction, exercises, and laboratory activities that the authors have been using and perfecting for years. These exercises and activities help students understand the fundamentals of working in a biotechnology laboratory. Building skills through an organized and systematic presentation of materials, procedures, and tasks, the manual explores overarching themes that relate to all biotechnology workplaces including forensic, clinical, quality control, environmental, and other testing laboratories.

Features:

â Provides clear instructions and step-by-step exercises to make learning the material easier for students.

There are Lab Notes for Instructors in the Support Material (see tab below).

â Emphasizes fundamental laboratory skills that prepare students for th

Trade Review

This hefty, 1,171-page, paperback book is worth its weight in gold. What a fantastic reference for the various aspects of biotechnology. I loved the emphasis on the "relationship between proper fundamental practices and reproducibility," and the authors' steadfast commitment to providing a "solid grounding in basic, quality practices" essential for success in biotechnology.

The sheer size and comprehensiveness of this book reinforces their introductory statement, "..'biotechnology' is not a synonym for 'molecular biology.'" Pretty much every possible test method used in a biotechnology setting (e.g., cell culture, chromatography, immunoassay) and their essential quality components (e.g., measurements such as weight and temperature; and solutions - love the declarative statement for section 24.1.1.2: "water is not pure") are described in great detail. Case studies accompany each chapter for the learners to test their retention and understanding. A nice inclusion is the section on regulatory affairs for learners to appreciate the challenges of bringing a biotechnology product to the consumer.

This is a fabulous textbook. If you work in biotechnology, this should be on every workbench and administrative office (e.g., supervisors, regulatory, quality assurance) for easy reference and, most importantly, adherence to
quality practices.

Valerie L Ng, PhD MD(Alameda County Medical Center/Highland Hospital)



Table of Contents

UNIT I SAFETY IN THE LABORATORY

Unit Introduction

SAFETY PART 1: CREATING A SAFE WORKPLACE

Fundamental Principles

Classroom Activity 1: Performing a Risk Assessment

Classroom Activity 2: Exploring Safety-Related Government Web Sites

Classroom Activity 3: Responding to Emergencies

SAFETY PART 2: WORKING SAFELY WITH CHEMICALS

Fundamental Principles

Classroom Activity 4: Understanding the Chemicals with Which You Work

Classroom Activity 5: Personal Protection

Laboratory Exercise 1: Tracking the Spread of Chemical Contamination

Classroom Activity 6: Analyzing Safety Issues in a Laboratory Procedure

SAFETY PART 3: WORKING SAFELY WITH BIOLOGICAL HAZARDS

Fundamental Principles

Laboratory Exercise 2: Production of Bioaerosols and Factors Affecting Aerosol

Production

Unit Discussion

Safety Contract, student copy

Safety Contract, to turn in

UNIT II DOCUMENTATION IN THE LABORATORY

Unit Introduction

Classroom Activity 7: Being an Auditor

Laboratory Exercise 3: Keeping a Laboratory Notebook

Classroom Activity 8: Writing and Following an SOP

Unit Discussion

UNIT III METROLOGY IN THE LABORATORY

Unit Introduction

Laboratory Exercise 4: Recording Measurements with the Correct Number of Significant
Figures
Classroom Activity 9: Constructing a Simple Balance

Laboratory Exercise 5: Weight Measurements 1: Good Weighing Practices

Laboratory Exercise 6: Weight Measurements 2: Performance Verification

Laboratory Exercise 7: Volume Measurements 1: Proper Use of Volume
Measuring Devices

Laboratory Exercise 8: Volume Measurements 2: Performance Verification of a M Micropipette

Laboratory Exercise 9: Measuring pH with Accuracy and Precision

Unit Discussion

UNIT IV SPECTROPHOTOMETRY AND THE MEASUREMENT OF LIGHT

Unit Introduction

Laboratory Exercise 10: Color and the Absorbance of Light

Laboratory Exercise 11: Concentration, Absorbance, and Transmittance

Laboratory Exercise 12: Preparing a Standard Curve With Food Coloring and Using it for Quantitation

Classroom Activity 10: Beer’s Law and Calculating an Absorptivity Constant

Laboratory Exercise 13: Determination of the Absorptivity Constant for ONP

Unit Discussion

UNIT V BIOLOGICAL SOLUTIONS

Unit Introduction

Classroom Activity 11: Getting Ready to Prepare Solutions with One Solute: Calculations

Classroom Activity 12: Getting Ready to Prepare Solutions with One Solute: Ordering
Chemicals

Laboratory Exercise 14: Preparing Solutions with One Solute

Laboratory Exercise 15: Preparing Solutions to the Correct Concentration

Laboratory Exercise 16: Working with Buffers

Laboratory Exercise 17: Preparing Breaking Buffer

Laboratory Exercise 18: Preparing TE Buffer

Laboratory Exercise 19: More Practice Making a Buffer

Laboratory Exercise 20: Making a Quality Product in a Simulated Company

Unit Discussion

UNIT VI ASSAYS

Unit Introduction

Laboratory Exercise 21: Two Qualitative Assays

Laboratory Exercise 22: UV Spectrophotometric Assay of DNA: Quantitative Application

Laboratory Exercise 23: UV Spectrophotometric Assay of DNA and Proteins: Qualitative Applications

Laboratory Exercise 24: The Bradford Protein Assay: Learning the Assay
Laboratory Exercise 25: The Bradford Protein Assay: Exploring Assay Verification
Laboratory Exercise 26: The Beta-Galactosidase Enzyme Assay
Laboratory Exercise 27: Comparing the Specific Activity of Two Preparations of
Beta-Galactosidase
Laboratory Exercise 28: Using Spectrophotometry for Quality Control: Niacin
Unit Discussion
UNIT VII BIOLOGICAL SEPARATION METHODS

Unit Introduction

Classroom Activity 13: Planning for Separating Materials Using a Centrifuge
Laboratory Exercise 29: Separation of Two Substances Based on Their Differential
Affinities for Two Phases
Laboratory Exercise 30: Separation and Identification of Dyes Using Paper
Chromatography
Laboratory Exercise 31: Separating Molecules by Agarose Gel Electrophoresis
Laboratory Exercise 32: Using Agarose Gel Electrophoresis to Perform an Assay
Laboratory Exercise 33: Optimizing Agarose Gel Electrophoresis

Laboratory Exercise 34: Quantification of DNA by Agarose Gel Electrophoresis
Laboratory Exercise 35: Introduction to Ion Exchange Column Chromatography

Unit Discussion

UNIT VIII GROWING CELLS

Unit Introduction

GROWING CELLS PART I: BACTERIAL CELLS

Laboratory Exercise 36: Using a Compound Light Microscope

Laboratory Exercise 37: Aseptic Technique on an Open Lab Bench

Laboratory Exercise 38: Working with Bacteria on an Agar Substrate: Isolating
Individual Colonies

Laboratory Exercise 39: Gram Staining

Laboratory Exercise 40: Preparing Phosphate-Buffered Saline

Laboratory Exercise 41: The Aerobic Spread-Plate Method of Enumerating Colony-

Forming Units

Laboratory Exercise 42: Preparing a Growth Curve for E. coli

GROWING CELLS PART 2: MAMMALIAN CELLS

Laboratory Exercise 43: Aseptic Technique in a Biological Safety Cabinet

Laboratory Exercise 44: Making Ham’s F12 Medium from Dehydrated Powder

Laboratory Exercise 45: Examining, Photographing, and Feeding CHO Cells

Laboratory Exercise 46: Counting Cells Using a Hemocytometer

Laboratory Exercise 47: Subculturing CHO Cells

Laboratory Exercise 48: Preparing a Growth Curve for CHO Cells

Unit Discussion

APPENDICES

1. Abbreviations and Acronyms Used in this Laboratory Manual

2. Glossary

3. Selected Bibliography

4. Brief Metric Review

5. Calculating Standard Deviation

6. Equipment, Supplies, and Reagents Required for Each Unit

7. Recipes and Preparation Notes

Laboratory Manual for Biotechnology and

    Product form

    £999.99

    Includes FREE delivery

    A Paperback by Lisa A. Seidman, Mary Ellen Kraus, Diana Lietzke Brandner

    Out of stock


      View other formats and editions of Laboratory Manual for Biotechnology and by Lisa A. Seidman

      Publisher: CRC Press
      Publication Date: 12/23/2022 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781032419916, 978-1032419916
      ISBN10: 1032419911

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Provides the basic laboratory skills and knowledge to pursue a career in biotechnology. Written by four biotechnology instructors with over 20 years of teaching experience, it incorporates instruction, exercises, and laboratory activities that the authors have been using and perfecting for years. These exercises and activities help students understand the fundamentals of working in a biotechnology laboratory. Building skills through an organized and systematic presentation of materials, procedures, and tasks, the manual explores overarching themes that relate to all biotechnology workplaces including forensic, clinical, quality control, environmental, and other testing laboratories.

      Features:

      â Provides clear instructions and step-by-step exercises to make learning the material easier for students.

      There are Lab Notes for Instructors in the Support Material (see tab below).

      â Emphasizes fundamental laboratory skills that prepare students for th

      Trade Review

      This hefty, 1,171-page, paperback book is worth its weight in gold. What a fantastic reference for the various aspects of biotechnology. I loved the emphasis on the "relationship between proper fundamental practices and reproducibility," and the authors' steadfast commitment to providing a "solid grounding in basic, quality practices" essential for success in biotechnology.

      The sheer size and comprehensiveness of this book reinforces their introductory statement, "..'biotechnology' is not a synonym for 'molecular biology.'" Pretty much every possible test method used in a biotechnology setting (e.g., cell culture, chromatography, immunoassay) and their essential quality components (e.g., measurements such as weight and temperature; and solutions - love the declarative statement for section 24.1.1.2: "water is not pure") are described in great detail. Case studies accompany each chapter for the learners to test their retention and understanding. A nice inclusion is the section on regulatory affairs for learners to appreciate the challenges of bringing a biotechnology product to the consumer.

      This is a fabulous textbook. If you work in biotechnology, this should be on every workbench and administrative office (e.g., supervisors, regulatory, quality assurance) for easy reference and, most importantly, adherence to
      quality practices.

      Valerie L Ng, PhD MD(Alameda County Medical Center/Highland Hospital)



      Table of Contents

      UNIT I SAFETY IN THE LABORATORY

      Unit Introduction

      SAFETY PART 1: CREATING A SAFE WORKPLACE

      Fundamental Principles

      Classroom Activity 1: Performing a Risk Assessment

      Classroom Activity 2: Exploring Safety-Related Government Web Sites

      Classroom Activity 3: Responding to Emergencies

      SAFETY PART 2: WORKING SAFELY WITH CHEMICALS

      Fundamental Principles

      Classroom Activity 4: Understanding the Chemicals with Which You Work

      Classroom Activity 5: Personal Protection

      Laboratory Exercise 1: Tracking the Spread of Chemical Contamination

      Classroom Activity 6: Analyzing Safety Issues in a Laboratory Procedure

      SAFETY PART 3: WORKING SAFELY WITH BIOLOGICAL HAZARDS

      Fundamental Principles

      Laboratory Exercise 2: Production of Bioaerosols and Factors Affecting Aerosol

      Production

      Unit Discussion

      Safety Contract, student copy

      Safety Contract, to turn in

      UNIT II DOCUMENTATION IN THE LABORATORY

      Unit Introduction

      Classroom Activity 7: Being an Auditor

      Laboratory Exercise 3: Keeping a Laboratory Notebook

      Classroom Activity 8: Writing and Following an SOP

      Unit Discussion

      UNIT III METROLOGY IN THE LABORATORY

      Unit Introduction

      Laboratory Exercise 4: Recording Measurements with the Correct Number of Significant
      Figures
      Classroom Activity 9: Constructing a Simple Balance

      Laboratory Exercise 5: Weight Measurements 1: Good Weighing Practices

      Laboratory Exercise 6: Weight Measurements 2: Performance Verification

      Laboratory Exercise 7: Volume Measurements 1: Proper Use of Volume
      Measuring Devices

      Laboratory Exercise 8: Volume Measurements 2: Performance Verification of a M Micropipette

      Laboratory Exercise 9: Measuring pH with Accuracy and Precision

      Unit Discussion

      UNIT IV SPECTROPHOTOMETRY AND THE MEASUREMENT OF LIGHT

      Unit Introduction

      Laboratory Exercise 10: Color and the Absorbance of Light

      Laboratory Exercise 11: Concentration, Absorbance, and Transmittance

      Laboratory Exercise 12: Preparing a Standard Curve With Food Coloring and Using it for Quantitation

      Classroom Activity 10: Beer’s Law and Calculating an Absorptivity Constant

      Laboratory Exercise 13: Determination of the Absorptivity Constant for ONP

      Unit Discussion

      UNIT V BIOLOGICAL SOLUTIONS

      Unit Introduction

      Classroom Activity 11: Getting Ready to Prepare Solutions with One Solute: Calculations

      Classroom Activity 12: Getting Ready to Prepare Solutions with One Solute: Ordering
      Chemicals

      Laboratory Exercise 14: Preparing Solutions with One Solute

      Laboratory Exercise 15: Preparing Solutions to the Correct Concentration

      Laboratory Exercise 16: Working with Buffers

      Laboratory Exercise 17: Preparing Breaking Buffer

      Laboratory Exercise 18: Preparing TE Buffer

      Laboratory Exercise 19: More Practice Making a Buffer

      Laboratory Exercise 20: Making a Quality Product in a Simulated Company

      Unit Discussion

      UNIT VI ASSAYS

      Unit Introduction

      Laboratory Exercise 21: Two Qualitative Assays

      Laboratory Exercise 22: UV Spectrophotometric Assay of DNA: Quantitative Application

      Laboratory Exercise 23: UV Spectrophotometric Assay of DNA and Proteins: Qualitative Applications

      Laboratory Exercise 24: The Bradford Protein Assay: Learning the Assay
      Laboratory Exercise 25: The Bradford Protein Assay: Exploring Assay Verification
      Laboratory Exercise 26: The Beta-Galactosidase Enzyme Assay
      Laboratory Exercise 27: Comparing the Specific Activity of Two Preparations of
      Beta-Galactosidase
      Laboratory Exercise 28: Using Spectrophotometry for Quality Control: Niacin
      Unit Discussion
      UNIT VII BIOLOGICAL SEPARATION METHODS

      Unit Introduction

      Classroom Activity 13: Planning for Separating Materials Using a Centrifuge
      Laboratory Exercise 29: Separation of Two Substances Based on Their Differential
      Affinities for Two Phases
      Laboratory Exercise 30: Separation and Identification of Dyes Using Paper
      Chromatography
      Laboratory Exercise 31: Separating Molecules by Agarose Gel Electrophoresis
      Laboratory Exercise 32: Using Agarose Gel Electrophoresis to Perform an Assay
      Laboratory Exercise 33: Optimizing Agarose Gel Electrophoresis

      Laboratory Exercise 34: Quantification of DNA by Agarose Gel Electrophoresis
      Laboratory Exercise 35: Introduction to Ion Exchange Column Chromatography

      Unit Discussion

      UNIT VIII GROWING CELLS

      Unit Introduction

      GROWING CELLS PART I: BACTERIAL CELLS

      Laboratory Exercise 36: Using a Compound Light Microscope

      Laboratory Exercise 37: Aseptic Technique on an Open Lab Bench

      Laboratory Exercise 38: Working with Bacteria on an Agar Substrate: Isolating
      Individual Colonies

      Laboratory Exercise 39: Gram Staining

      Laboratory Exercise 40: Preparing Phosphate-Buffered Saline

      Laboratory Exercise 41: The Aerobic Spread-Plate Method of Enumerating Colony-

      Forming Units

      Laboratory Exercise 42: Preparing a Growth Curve for E. coli

      GROWING CELLS PART 2: MAMMALIAN CELLS

      Laboratory Exercise 43: Aseptic Technique in a Biological Safety Cabinet

      Laboratory Exercise 44: Making Ham’s F12 Medium from Dehydrated Powder

      Laboratory Exercise 45: Examining, Photographing, and Feeding CHO Cells

      Laboratory Exercise 46: Counting Cells Using a Hemocytometer

      Laboratory Exercise 47: Subculturing CHO Cells

      Laboratory Exercise 48: Preparing a Growth Curve for CHO Cells

      Unit Discussion

      APPENDICES

      1. Abbreviations and Acronyms Used in this Laboratory Manual

      2. Glossary

      3. Selected Bibliography

      4. Brief Metric Review

      5. Calculating Standard Deviation

      6. Equipment, Supplies, and Reagents Required for Each Unit

      7. Recipes and Preparation Notes

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