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ARTGEL: A temperature-regulated electrophoresis platform for quantitative studies of reversible association in gels
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Announce Type: cross Abstract: Here we present ARTGEL, an actively regulated-temperature gel electrophoresis platform designed for long-duration experiments under independently controlled thermal and electrical conditions. ARTGEL combines thermoelectric regulation of the gel temperature, a large heated and circulated buffer reservoir, and an automated electrode-wiping mechanism that stabilizes the voltage across the gel during runs exceeding 24 h. The platform was developed to address a...
arXiv:2606.09597v1 Announce Type: cross
Abstract: Here we present ARTGEL, an actively regulated-temperature gel electrophoresis platform designed for long-duration experiments under independently controlled thermal and electrical conditions. ARTGEL combines thermoelectric regulation of the gel temperature, a large heated and circulated buffer reservoir, and an automated electrode-wiping mechanism that stabilizes the voltage across the gel during runs exceeding 24 h. The platform was developed to address a limitation of conventional electrophoretic mobility shift assays, which are commonly used to analyze reversible biomolecular association but usually aim to suppress reaction during electrophoresis by dilution, competitors, or reduced temperature so that the gel reports a pre-equilibrated bulk solution. For temperature-sensitive systems, these strategies can alter the chemical state during loading and migration and obscure whether the measured band pattern reflects the original bulk sample or a re-equilibrated state inside the porous gel. Rather than attempting to quench reactions, ARTGEL enables electrophoresis to be performed at the same temperature as complementary bulk measurements, so that reversible association can be quantified directly in the gel and compared with matched measurements in solution. Using DNA origami assemblies, we show that ARTGEL preserves distinct temperature-dependent association states, resolves reaction-dependent distortions of migrating bands, and supports extraction of in-gel kinetic and thermodynamic parameters from reaction-diffusion-advection modeling.