DNA extraction استخلاص الحمض النووي
DNA isolation is a process of purification of DNA
from sample using a combination of physical and chemical methods. The first
isolation of DNA was done in 1869 by Friedrich Miescher.[1]
Currently it is a routine procedure in molecular
biology or forensic analyses.
Contents
- 1 Basic procedure of DNA extraction
- 2 Special Types of DNA Extractions
- 3 Detecting DNA
- 4 See also
- 5 References
- 6 External links
- 7 Further reading
Basic procedure of DNA extraction
There are three basic and two optional steps in a DNA
extraction:
- Breaking the cells open, commonly referred to as cell disruption or cell lysis, to expose the DNA within. This is commonly achieved by chemical and physical methods-blending, grinding or sonicating the sample.
- Removing membrane lipids by adding a detergent or surfactants which also serves in cell lysis.
- Removing proteins by adding a protease (optional but often done).
- Removing RNA by adding an RNase (almost always done).
- DNA purification from detergents, proteins, salts and reagents used during cell lysis step. The most commonly used procedures are:
- Ethanol precipitation usually by ice-cold ethanol or isopropanol. Since DNA is insoluble in these alcohols, it will aggregate together, giving a pellet upon centrifugation. Precipitation of DNA is improved by increasing of ionic strength, usually by adding sodium acetate.
- Phenol–chloroform extraction in which phenol denatures proteins in the sample. After centrifugation of the sample, denaturated proteins stay in organic phase while aqueous phase containing nucleic acid is mixed with the chloroform that removes phenol residues from solution. (Note: for DNA isolation in used phenol buffered to pH 8, RNA must be isolated using acidic phenol.)
- Minicolumn purification that relies on the fact that the nucleic acid may bind (adsorption) to the solid phase (silica or other) depending on the pH and the salt content of the buffer.
Refinements of the technique include adding a chelating
agent to sequester divalent cations, such as Mg2+
and Ca2+,
which prevents enzymes like DNase from degrading the DNA.
Cellular and histone proteins bound to the DNA can be removed either by
adding a protease
or by having precipitated the proteins with sodium
or ammonium acetate, or extracted them with a phenol-chloroform
mixture prior to the DNA-precipitation.
After isolation, the DNA is dissolved in slightly alkaline
buffer, usually in the TE buffer, or in ultra-pure water.
Special Types of DNA Extractions
Specific techniques must be chosen for isolation of DNA from
some samples. Typical samples with complicated DNA isolation are:
- archaeological samples containing partially degraded DNA, see ancient DNA
- samples containing inhibitors of subsequent analysis procedures, most notably inhibitors of PCR, such as humic acid from soil, indigo and other fabric dyes or haemoglobin in blood
- samples from microorganisms with thick cellular wall, for example yeast
Extrachromosomal DNA is generally easy to isolate,
especially plasmids
may be easily isolated by cell lysis followed by precipitation of proteins,
which traps chromosomal DNA in insoluble fraction and after centrifugation,
plasmid DNA can be purified from soluble fraction.
A Hirt DNA Extraction is an isolation of all extrachromosomal DNA in a mammalian cell.
The Hirt extraction process gets rid of the high molecular weight nuclear DNA,
leaving only low molecular weight mitochondrial
DNA and any viral episomes present in the cell.
Detecting DNA
Main article: Quantification of nucleic acids
A diphenylamine (DPA) indicator will confirm the presence of
DNA. This procedure involves chemical hydrolysis of DNA: when heated (e.g.
≥95 °C) in acid, the reaction requires a deoxyribose sugar and therefore
is specific for DNA. Under these conditions, the 2-deoxyribose is converted to
w-hydroxylevulinyl aldehyde, which reacts with the compound, diphenylamine, to
produce a blue-colored compound. DNA concentration can be determined measuring
the intensity of absorbance of the solution at the 600 nm with a spectrophotometer
and comparing to a standard curve of known DNA concentrations.
Measuring the intensity of absorbance of the DNA solution at
wavelengths 260 nm and 280 nm is used
as a measure of DNA purity. DNA absorbs UV light at 260 and 280
nanometres, and aromatic proteins absorb UV light at 280 nm; a pure sample
of DNA has a ratio of 1.8 at 260/280 and is relatively free from protein
contamination. A DNA preparation that is contaminated with protein will have a
260/280 ratio lower than 1.8.
DNA can be quantified by cutting the DNA with a restriction enzyme, running it on an agarose gel, staining with ethidium
bromide or a different stain and comparing the intensity of the DNA
with a DNA marker of known concentration.
Using the Southern blot
technique, this quantified DNA can be isolated and examined further using PCR and RFLP analysis. These
procedures allow differentiation of the repeated sequences within the genome.
It is these techniques which forensic scientists use for comparison, identification, and
analysis.
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