Question
Asked 24th Oct, 2012

How to quantify each band in gel electrophoresis?

I am doing DNA electrophoresis. I wonder is there a way to quantify the amount of DNA in each band

Most recent answer

You can use your ladder as reference point. Measure the Rf distances for each band. Then measure the distances for thd ladder of interest. Use the logarithm on the ladder values. plot the graph on excel. Then from the equation. y=mc+b use the m for each value of the ladder rfs. Which those Rrfs after you substitute them . Each final result on equation must be inverter antiLog which corresponds to the original distance the band fragment travelled.
Or just go Image j. all in one
4 Recommendations

Popular answers (1)

Yulia Fridman
Technion - Israel Institute of Technology
If you need an estimation, you can use your ladder bands as a point of reference.
You know the concentration of each band in the ladder, so measure it's intensity (almost every graphical software can do that, but I recommend ImageJ), then measure your band and compare (don't forget to insert into your calculations correction for the difference in volume, if any).
Try using bands from your ladder that are similar to your band of interest.
9 Recommendations

All Answers (29)

Jozef I Nissimov
University of Waterloo
I wouldnt use any software for quantifying DNA. I think that you can use it in a qualitative way though. There are a lot of potential biases when using such software and from what I was told and have done myself is to actualy extract each band, clean the product for instacne with a promega kit and then nano-drop it in order to get the exact concentration. I might be wrong though so lets see what others say. Good luck.
1 Recommendation
Rachel Ann Hauser-Davis
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz
You can do an analytical curve in a 1D gel, with known amounts of BSA for example, use photoshop to quantify the pixels (the curve would be pixels x protein mass you applied for each well) and then you count the number of pixels in your sample bands and then plot them in the curve, I´ve done that with quite good results, you can find tutorials on the internet! But it´s quite time consuming... :)
Yulia Fridman
Technion - Israel Institute of Technology
If you need an estimation, you can use your ladder bands as a point of reference.
You know the concentration of each band in the ladder, so measure it's intensity (almost every graphical software can do that, but I recommend ImageJ), then measure your band and compare (don't forget to insert into your calculations correction for the difference in volume, if any).
Try using bands from your ladder that are similar to your band of interest.
9 Recommendations
Rachel Ann Hauser-Davis
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz
Hello Yulia, do you mean the molecular weight standards? Where do I get the info regarding concentrations of each separate protein band of the MW standard? I use Biorad dual color standards, and couldn´t find the info anywhere! :)
Sahar Shadi
University of Tabriz
You can use a ladder as a refrence by comparison of each bands,the similarity between your ladder and bands can help you to measure them.
2 Recommendations
Polpass Arul Jose
Harvard University
You can try half-dilution method
Chris Skovgaard Ramming
University of Southern Denmark
Like Jozef Nissimov says Nanodrop will give you an exact reading on the amount of DNA, however gel extraction kits have size restrictions. Have that in mind if you want to extract DNA from gels. You could lose DNA material.
Dr. Arvind Chavhan
Digambarrao Bindu ACS College Bhokar
Prranshu Yadav
The Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda
Yulia and Rachel, i may be wrong but the intensity of bands probebly depends not just on concentration of the oligonucleotide, but also on length of oligonucleotide, as shorter oligonucleotides would bind to lesser number of Ethidium Bromide molecules. If this is the case, then some correction may have to be introduced for it.
Prranshu Yadav
The Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda
ofcourse this may be a problem only in case of DNA bands though.
Rachel Ann Hauser-Davis
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz
That´s what I was about to say, regular protein electrophoresis shouldn´t be a problem I think! :)
Yulia Fridman
Technion - Israel Institute of Technology
Yadav, in case of DNA, length will influence the strength of the signal. but if you take as reference band that is in similar length (ladder band of 3Kb when your fragment is 3.3Kb, for example), the estimation will be quite good.
1 Recommendation
Yulia Fridman
Technion - Israel Institute of Technology
Hi Rachel,
The original question talked about DNA gels.
Regarding proteins - I looked at the info regarding your ladder, and they really does not provide quantity information.
What you can do is make as BSA standard curve and align your samples to it.
Surachai Rattanasuk
Roi Et Rajabhat University
If they did not provide the size ref.. can you change to new DNA ladder that have size ref.??
Santosh Kodgire
Reliance Industries Limited, Jamnagar
hi yanfei li
i will suggest u to use the DNA ladder to compare the lanes during software analysis to calculate the band percentage or calculate the intensity based on peak height and peak area or during image capture increase the dpi (resolution) more than 100dpi images or simply pick the band from gel elute it with extraction buffer and go for estimation.
1 Recommendation
David Rosenkranz
Universitätsmedizin der Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
Maybe this will help:
It compares gel bands in the same gel and calculates the relative amount (mass rather than concentration) of DNA. Yielded good results when tested with a DNA ladder.
1 Recommendation
Yanfei Li
Texas Tech University
Hi David, the link you suggested does not open.
David Rosenkranz
Universitätsmedizin der Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
hmm... works fine when i click it. But you will find it easily when you do google search with "SpeedyQuant" You can also have a look at the suppliers homepage for more information and some documentation: www.foreach-bioinformatics.de
Wajid Ali Khan
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Agricultural University, Peshawar
Gelbuddy is most effective software.Just you have to install java on your computer (http://java.com/en/download/index.jsp) and than java advance image library (http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/current-142188.html) and download Gelbuddy (http://www.proweb.org/gelbuddy/). Just click on the Gelbuddy and enjoy yourself using it. Don't hesitate to ask for favour!
2 Recommendations
Blaz Blaž Stres
University of Ljubljana
I suggest you try also http://www.gelanalyzer.com/
if you still need a solution.
1 Recommendation
Meeta Saxena
Indian Veterinary Research Institute
Use gene ruler from fermentas each band tells concenteration you can calculate accordingly
Xiaofeng Fang
John Innes Centre
I tried Image J before, http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/
Rachel Ann Hauser-Davis
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz
image J, photoshop, they're pretty much all the same, you count pixels and can then reach an approximate value for quantifyingyour bands in comparison to a known standard. I did BSA standards ranging from 5 to 30 ug (silver nitrate staining, if you stain by coomassie you should double or triple these values for 13 cm gels), and then added my samples to the other gel slots. When I scanned the gel, I just counted the pixels for each standard, plotted a standard curve of pixels x concentration and voilá!  Here: http://support.dalton.missouri.edu/index.php/wiki/Public:Quantifying_Color_Intensity/
This is a very easy tutorial, you can easily do this on photoshop! 
Cheers! :)
can anyone know about the measurement unit of  band volume analysed in totallab 100
1 Recommendation
Abhishek Kumar
Forest Research Institute Dehradun
How to quantify bands in Alpha Imager?
You can use your ladder as reference point. Measure the Rf distances for each band. Then measure the distances for thd ladder of interest. Use the logarithm on the ladder values. plot the graph on excel. Then from the equation. y=mc+b use the m for each value of the ladder rfs. Which those Rrfs after you substitute them . Each final result on equation must be inverter antiLog which corresponds to the original distance the band fragment travelled.
Or just go Image j. all in one
4 Recommendations

Similar questions and discussions

Related Publications

Preprint
Full-text available
Agarose gel electrophoresis can help determine the mass of a certain DNA fragment. This protocol will help user conduct gel electrophoresis appropriately.
Article
Full-text available
Agarose gel electrophoresis is the most useful and revolutionary process for separating, analyzing, identifying, and purifying different DNA fragments (in shape or size) from any cell or organism. This process is an amalgamation of four associated techniques viz. gel casting, electrophoresis, staining, and imaging, which are consecutively accomplis...
Article
Full-text available
We introduce a new biased reptation theory that allows a qualitative and semiquantitative study of DNA gel electrophoresis. We prove that stretching of the end-to-end vector of a very long charged reptating chain in an electric field occurs in a short period of time during a typical electrophoresis experiment, and that this leads to a field-depende...
Got a technical question?
Get high-quality answers from experts.