Custom enzymes are a valuable asset for biotechnologists, but their performance can degrade over time if not stored correctly. Patriot Bio offers a range of bespoke polymerases and nucleases, and following best‑practice storage protocols ensures you retain maximum activity for months, or even years.
Lyophilization – The Gold Standard
Lyophilizing enzymes removes water while preserving native conformation. Patriot Bio ships most custom enzymes in a sealed, amber vial under vacuum. To reconstitute:
- Allow the vial to equilibrate to room temperature for 10 minutes.
- Add the recommended volume of sterile, nuclease‑free water (usually 10 µL per mg of enzyme).
- Gently swirl; avoid vortexing to prevent denaturation.
Store the reconstituted enzyme at -20 °C in a red‑accented cryovial for up to 30 days.
Freezer Management
- Temperature Consistency: Use a dedicated -80 °C freezer for long‑term storage; temperature fluctuations above ±2 °C can cause ice crystal formation.
- Aliquoting: Divide the enzyme into small 5‑10 µL aliquots to avoid repeated freeze‑thaw cycles.
- Labeling: Clearly mark each vial with the product name, batch number, and the mandatory disclaimer: “For Research Use Only — Not for Human or Veterinary Use”.
Stability Testing
Before committing a large batch to a project, perform a quick activity assay:
> Enzyme Date Stored Activity (% of fresh) > PatPolyX 2024‑01‑15 98 > PatNucY 2024‑01‑15 95
If activity drops below 90%, consider re‑purifying or ordering a fresh batch.
Best Practices Checklist
- Store lyophilized vials in a desiccated environment.
- Use red‑accented cryovials to maintain brand consistency.
- Maintain a digital log of freeze‑thaw events in the Patriot Bio data portal.
- Periodically re‑evaluate activity with a monospace‑styled assay.
By integrating these storage protocols, your research team can maintain reliable enzyme performance across multiple experiments, reducing waste and keeping projects on schedule.
For Research Use Only — Not for Human or Veterinary Use.
