Answer: 0.12 μL of purified protein, 4 μL of a 6X sample buffer, 19.88 μL of water.
Step-by-step explanation:
The law of conservation of mass is used to solve this problem. It indicates that mass is neither created nor destroyed, it is only transformed. In a chemical reaction the sum of the mass of the reagents is equal to the sum of the mass of the products. It can be written as:
Concentration 1 x Volume 1 = Concentration 2 x Volume 2
1= initial values
2= final values
The concentration of the protein is 3mg/mL, we need to load a total of
15 μg/mL (0.015 mg/mL), and we know the final volume should be 24μL. So we calculate this as:
3mg/mL x Volume 1 = 0.015 mg/mL x 24 μL
Volume 1 = 0.12 μL.
This means, we should use 0.12 μL of te solution that contains 3 mg of proteins/mL.
The same equation is used to calculate the amount of sample buffer which is 6 times concentrated (6X)
6X x Volume 1 = 1X x 24 μL
Volume 1 = 4 μL,
This means, we should use 4 μL of a 6X sample buffer.
So far we have 0.12 μL of protein + 4 μL of sample buffer. Since the final volume is 24 μL, we must add a quantity of water in order to reach that final volume.
24 μL - 0.12 μL - 4 μL = 19.88 μL of water,