Issue 3, 2010

Characterization of dynamic solid phase DNAextraction from blood with magnetically controlled silica beads

Abstract

A novel solid phase extraction technique is described where DNA is bound and eluted from magnetic silica beads in a manner where efficiency is dependent on the magnetic manipulation of the beads and not on the flow of solution through a packed bed. The utility of this technique in the isolation of reasonably pure, PCR-amplifiable DNA from complex samples is shown by isolating DNA from whole human blood, and subsequently amplifying a fragment of the β-globin gene. By effectively controlling the movement of the solid phase in the presence of a static sample, the issues associated with reproducibly packing a solid phase in a microchannel and maintaining consistent flow rates are eliminated. The technique described here is rapid, simple, and efficient, allowing for recovery of more than 60% of DNA from 0.6 µL of blood at a concentration which is suitable for PCR amplification. In addition, the technique presented here requires inexpensive, common laboratory equipment, making it easily adopted for both clinical point-of-care applications and on-site forensic sample analysis.

Graphical abstract: Characterization of dynamic solid phase DNA extraction from blood with magnetically controlled silica beads

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
15 Sep 2009
Accepted
07 Jan 2010
First published
25 Jan 2010

Analyst, 2010,135, 531-537

Characterization of dynamic solid phase DNA extraction from blood with magnetically controlled silica beads

G. R. M. Duarte, C. W. Price, J. L. Littlewood, D. M. Haverstick, J. P. Ferrance, E. Carrilho and J. P. Landers, Analyst, 2010, 135, 531 DOI: 10.1039/B918996C

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