For SOB:
200mL | 250mL | 1L | Final [ ] | Component |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 g | 1.25 g | 5 g | 0.5% | yeast extract |
4 g | 5 g | 20 g | 2.0% | tryptone |
0.12 g | 0.125 g | 0.5 g | 10 mM | NaCl |
0.037 g* | 0.042 g* | 0.186 g | 2 mM | KCl |
0.48 g | 0.6 g | 2.4 g | 20 mM | MgSO4 (anhydrous) |
*Don't measure; it's just a pinch.
Adjust to pH 7.5 with 1M NaOH.
Note: 200 ml of SOC makes 25 vials of 8 ml each.
For 1 L: Add 800 ml of dH2O and dissolve components. Adjust to pH 7.5 prior to use with 1 M NaOH (approximately 25 ml). Add dH2O to a final volume 1 L.
Autoclave.
Smaller scale: To achieve a 20 mM concentration of glucose for a known final volume n of SOC, you can calculate the amount of 10% w/v glucose to be added as 0.036n. The amount of SOB to add is then 0.964n. Keep units constant, so if n is in µL, the final amounts will also be in µL and so on.
Generally when making stocks of SOC it is advisable to make smaller volume aliquots rather than larger ones. SOC media is extremely rich and can contaminate easily particularly after glucose is added. Additionally, smaller volumes tend to be pulled from it repeatedly with pipettes, which increases the chances of contamination over time.
Note: Some recipes for SOB use 10 mM MgSO4 and 10 mM MgCl.