Publicado por : Curro

La historia de hoy es muy muy romántica y muy muy friki. En resumen es un chico, trabajador en un laboratorio de biología molecular, que quiere darle una sorpresa a su novia para proponerle matrimonio el día de san valentín. Para ello, utiliza una prueba de laboratorio llamada PCR (reacción en cadena de la polimerasa); simplificando, consiste en obtener diversos fragmentos amplificados de ADN a partir de una copia. Después se realizan una serie de pasos y el resultado final queda tal que así:


Nuestro héroe nos explica por encima como lo hizo todo (en inglés):
"They're 5 sized PCR fragments (roughly 150, 300, 500, 700, 1kb), I went back through my notes to find 5 primer pairs that I knew worked pretty well (so don't feel bad, they're selected out of primers that had been pre-validated =p). The other lanes are just mixes of the 5 sizes (either 2:3:4 or 4:6 volume mixes going in decreasing size, since larger fragments tend to be brighter). The gel actually didn't take that long (though it was terrifying loading it), but I made a mockup in Illustrator beforehand (along with a ladder to test what sizes to use), and then sketched it out beforehand so I knew what to add to each lane. 700 was the hardest to find for some reason, so I didn't really care about whether it was perfect or had primer dimers (and yeah I've had a friend complain to me about that also).
The most difficult part of the entire thing was actually coming up with a good enough excuse to get her to image a gel in my lab! And meeting a girl nice enough to actually agree to do that while believing it was my real work! The actual proposal occurred a couple minutes after and involved flowers (outside the building - the gel was fun, but I decided a long time ago I didn't want to actually propose in any place with as many cockroaches as our lab buildings =))"

{ 1 comentarios... léelos y comenta }

  1. Wow, this story perfectly blends romance and science! Imagine a guy in a molecular biology lab planning a Valentine’s Day surprise for his girlfriend using PCR to craft a unique proposal—it’s both clever and heartwarming. It really makes you wonder what lengths people go to for love, almost like wishing you could “pay someone to take my TEAS exam” just to free up time for something meaningful. The mix of lab work and personal emotion gives it such a charming, geeky twist.

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