| Literature DB >> 28785592 |
Nasir Ali1,2, Rita de Cássia Pontello Rampazzo2, Alexandre Dias Tavares Costa2,3, Marco Aurelio Krieger1,2,3.
Abstract
Nucleic acid extraction (NAE) plays a vital role in molecular biology as the primary step for many downstream applications. Many modifications have been introduced to the original 1869 method. Modern processes are categorized into chemical or mechanical, each with peculiarities that influence their use, especially in point-of-care diagnostics (POC-Dx). POC-Dx is a new approach aiming to replace sophisticated analytical machinery with microanalytical systems, able to be used near the patient, at the point of care or point of need. Although notable efforts have been made, a simple and effective extraction method is still a major challenge for widespread use of POC-Dx. In this review, we dissected the working principle of each of the most common NAE methods, overviewing their advantages and disadvantages, as well their potential for integration in POC-Dx systems. At present, it seems difficult, if not impossible, to establish a procedure which can be universally applied to POC-Dx. We also discuss the effects of the NAE chemicals upon the main plastic polymers used to mass produce POC-Dx systems. We end our review discussing the limitations and challenges that should guide the quest for an efficient extraction method that can be integrated in a POC-Dx system.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28785592 PMCID: PMC5529626 DOI: 10.1155/2017/9306564
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Main characteristics of chemical and mechanical methods to extract nucleic acid (adapted from Harrison 2003).
| Method | Technique | Principle | Mode of lysis | Cost | Most usual application | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chemical | Osmotic shock | Osmotic rupture of membrane | Gentle | Cheap | Spheroplasts and Protoplasts | [ |
| Enzymatic digestion | Digestion of cell wall | Gentle | Cheap at small scale; expensive at large scale | Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria | [ | |
| Detergents | Solubilization of membranes | Gentle | Moderate | General use | [ | |
| Alkali treatment | Solubilization of membrane | Harsh | Cheap | Plasmid DNA | [ | |
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| ||||||
| Mechanical | Homogenization (blade or pestle) | Shredding of cells | Moderate | Moderate (method of choice for large scale) | Animal tissues | [ |
| Ultrasonication or cavitation | Disruption of cells by pressure | Harsh | Moderate to expensive | Good for spheroplasts but not primary cells | [ | |
| Pressure cell (“French press”) | Disruption of cells by shear force | Harsh | Moderate | Used for Gram-negative and some Gram-positive bacteria | [ | |
| Ball mill | Cells crushed between glass/steel balls/beads | Harsh | Cheap | Used for bacteria, yeast, microalgae, unicellular animal cells | [ | |
Summary of advantages and disadvantages of the main NAE methods. GuSCN, guanidine thiocyanate; CsCl, cesium chloride; EtBr, ethidium bromide; CTAB, cetyltrimethylammonium bromide.
| Method | Advantage | Disadvantage | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| (1) GuSCN-phenol- chloroform extraction | High purity and yield of DNA or RNA | Hazardous chemicals | [ |
| (2) Alkaline extraction | Fastest, reliable, and relatively easy procedure | Medium purity and fragmentation of genomic DNA | [ |
| (3) CsCl gradient centrifugation with EtBr | High purity and yield of DNA or RNA | Laborious, costly and time consuming, | [ |
| (4) Oligo(dT) cellulose chromatography | Fast protocol, good yield of mRNA recovery | Purification bias for mRNAs | [ |
| (5) Chelex® extraction | Quick and simple protocol; no use of hazardous chemicals | Low purity of nucleic acids | [ |
| (6) CTAB extraction | Efficient method for plant and other “hard to lyse” samples | Laborious, time-consuming; use of hazardous chemicals | [ |
Summary of the advantages and disadvantages of solid-phase extraction methods.
| Material | Molecule of affinity | Advantage | Disadvantage | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Silica matrices | DNA, RNA | High-purity DNA, easy to perform, and reproducible | Unable to recover small DNA fragments; one-time use | [ |
| (2) Glass particles | DNA, protein | Simple, sensitive, and reproducible | High cost; requirement of equipment | [ |
| (3) Diatomaceous earth | DNA, RNA | Reduced pipetting error, shorter protocol (less time and steps) | High cost | [ |
| (4) Magnetic beads | DNA, RNA | No centrifugation, best choice for automation, virtually equipment-free | Interference in PCR amplification | [ |
| (5) Anion exchange material | DNA, RNA | Reusable resins | Presence of high-salt concentrations | [ |
| (6) Cellulose matrix | DNA, RNA | Easy to use and storage | Extraction protocols being complex and prone to error | [ |
Examples of commercially available kits applying each extraction method and typical yields for distinct samples.
| Method | Commercial availability | Sample origin | Typical yield | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GSCN-phenol-chloroform extraction | TRIzol reagent (e.g.,, Invitrogen) | Mammalian cells (106 cells) | Epithelial cells, 8–15 | [ |
| Alkaline extraction | Plasmid Maxi Kit (e.g., Qiagen) | Cultured bacteria (2.5 L) | Up to 500 | [ |
| CTAB | NucleoSpin 8 Plant and NucleoSpin 96 Plant II (e.g., Clontech) | Plant material 20–100 mg plant tissue (wet weight) | 1–30 | [ |
| Silica matrices | QIAamp DNA mini kit (e.g., Qiagen) | Blood (200 | 4–12 | [ |
| Magnetic bead | Agencourt DNAdvance Kit (e.g., Beckman Coulter) | Mammalian tissues (25 mg of sample) | 18–35 | [ |
| Anion exchange material | PureLink® HiPure Plasmid DNA Purification Kits (e.g., Invitrogen) | Culture bacteria: midipreps (15–25 mL) or maxiprep (up to 200 mL) | 350 | [ |
| Diatomaceous Earth | Quantum Prep Plasmid Purification Kits (e.g., Bio-Rad) | Culture bacteria (1-2 mL liquid culture) | Up to 40 | [ |
| Cellulose matrix | FTA cards (e.g., Whatman) | 8 × 2 mm punches | 1–5 | [ |
Summary of available devices used in nucleic acid extraction protocols.
| Material | Molecule of affinity | Advantage | Disadvantage | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Spin columns | DNA, RNA | Fast; reproducible | Aerosols cross-contamination; infrastructure and equipment required | [ |
| (2) Beads or magnetic beads | DNA, RNA | Simple to use; high automation potential; equipment-free process | Labor intensive | [ |
| (3) Automation (liquid handling robots) | DNA, RNA | Precise manipulation of sample and reagents, reducing losses and cost | High cost | [ |
| (4) Microfluidics and “lab-on-a-chip” cartridges | DNA, RNA | Sensitive and specific | Incompatibility of common NAE chemicals | [ |
Chemical compatibility of various chemicals used in nucleic acid extraction procedures and plastic polymers commonly used in microfabrication. (PDMS, polydimethylsiloxane; PMMA, polymethylmethacrylate; PS, polystyrene; PC, polycarbonates.) Information was gathered from multiple sources, such as the following vendor's websites: http://www.permselect.com, http://www.labicom.com.cz, https://www.coleparmer.co.uk/Chemical-Resistance.
| Chemicals∖Plastic polymer | PDMS | PMMA | PS | PC |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethanol | Good | Good | Not compatible | Excellent |
| Phenol 10% | Not compatible | Not compatible | Not compatible | Not compatible |
| Chloroform | Not compatible | Not compatible | Not compatible | Not compatible |
| Detergents | Excellent | — | — | — |
| Urea | Good | Excellent | Excellent | Excellent |
| Guanidinium thiocyanate | — | Good | — | Excellent |
| Methyl alcohol | Excellent | Good | Good | Fair |
| Alcohols: isopropyl | Excellent | Excellent | Excellent | Fair |
| Alcohols: ethyl | Good | Good | Good | Excellent |
| Alcohols: amyl | Not compatible | Excellent | Good | Good |
| HCl 37% | Not compatible | — | — | — |
| HCl 20% | Good | Good | Good | Good |