Talk:Sea pansy

There is a second member of the sea pansy known, R. mulleri. My source doesn't give me more than the name, through.

Where it says that luciferase has become important "recently," that recently should be deleted. It's a quote from 1988, and luciferase has been around for quite a while. It's also worth noting that in dual-luciferase assay Renilla luciferase is often compared to the much more commonly used firefly luciferase because they have different substrates. In this way, the reagents to initiate the luminescent reaction for the firefly luciferase can be added, then quenched, and the renilla luciferase can be assayed directly after in the same samples (for example, as a control.) This is important if only because renilla luciferase is rarely used as a reporter gene the way that firefly luciferase is used, and so it would be nice to explain what it is used for. http://www.promega.com/products/reporter-assays-and-transfection/reporter-assays/dual_luciferase-reporter-assay-system/ (Fourthandfifth (talk) 21:24, 11 August 2011 (UTC))

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