| Literature DB >> 25553520 |
Qingqing Hu1, Yuxuan Liu1, Shaohua Yi1, Daixin Huang2.
Abstract
Biological samples collected from the crime scenes often contain some compounds that can inhibit the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The removal of PCR inhibitors from the extracts prior to the PCR amplification is vital for successful forensic DNA typing. This paper aimed to evaluate the ability of four different methods (PowerClean® DNA Clean-Up kit, DNA IQ™ System, Phenol-Chloroform extraction and Chelex®-100 methods) to remove eight commonly encountered PCR inhibitors including: melanin, humic acid, collagen, bile salt, hematin, calcium ions, indigo and urea. Each of these PCR inhibitors was effectively removed by the PowerClean® DNA Clean-Up kit and DNA IQ™ System as demonstrated by generating more complete short tandem repeat (STR) profiles from the cleaned up inhibitor samples than from the raw inhibitor samples. The Phenol-Chloroform extraction and Chelex®-100 methods, however, could only remove some of eight PCR inhibitors. Our results demonstrated that the PowerClean® DNA Clean-Up kit and DNA IQ™ System were very effective for the removal of known PCR inhibitors that are routinely found in DNA extracts from forensic samples.Entities:
Keywords: Chelex(®)-100; DNA IQ™; Forensic DNA analysis; PCR inhibition; Phenol–Chloroform; PowerClean(®) DNA Clean-Up
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25553520 DOI: 10.1016/j.fsigen.2014.12.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Forensic Sci Int Genet ISSN: 1872-4973 Impact factor: 4.882