| Literature DB >> 31655574 |
Prassan Choudhary1, Sudipta Das1, Hillol Chakdar2, Arjun Singh1, Sanjay Kumar Goswami1, Anil Kumar Saxena1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Conventional plant DNA isolation methods are complex, time consuming and require technical expertise. These limitations were overcome using the DNA isolation kits which, however significantly add to the research costs. Hence the present study was aimed to develop a high throughput, rapid and inexpensive method of PCR ready DNA template preparation from plant materials.Entities:
Keywords: Plant- DNA- high throughput- PCR-SSR
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31655574 PMCID: PMC6815007 DOI: 10.1186/s12896-019-0560-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biotechnol ISSN: 1472-6750 Impact factor: 2.563
DNA quality and yield in lysates prepared with different concentrations of SDS, different amount of tissue and different time duration
| Parameters | DNA Purity (A260/A280) | DNA Concentration (ng/μl) a | |
|---|---|---|---|
| SDS conc. (%) | 0.5 | 1.03 | 451.67 ± 8.82 |
| 1.0 | 1.01 | 768.33 ± 6.01 | |
| 1.5 | 1.03 | 376.67 ± 4.41 | |
| 2.0 | 1.04 | 252.17 ± 1.48 | |
| 2.5 | 1.03 | 438.33 ± 14.24 | |
| 3.0 | 1.04 | 261.17 ± 21.17 | |
| 3.5 | 1.05 | 218.33 ± 3.33 | |
| 4.0 | 1.06 | 260.17 ± 3.06 | |
| 4.5 | 1.05 | 326.67 ± 1.67 | |
| 5.0 | 1.04 | 446.67 ± 14.81 | |
| Amount of tissue | One disc (~ 1.6 mg) | 1.06 | 420.00 ± 10.08 |
| Two disc(~ 3.2 mg) | 1.04 | 760.00 ± 6.75 | |
| Time durations | 10 min | 1.08 | 876.67 ± 37.12 |
| 20 min | 1.05 | 808.33 ± 6.01 |
aDNA concentration is represented as Mean ± SE
Fig. 1OPB6 (lane 1 to 10) and OPB7 (lane 11 to 20) primers showed good amplification results using10X and 20X dilutions of the crude template DNA lysate. Lane 1:Crude lysate (Cr) -without 1% BSA (BSA−); Lane 2: 10 times diluted (10X) lysate-BSA−; Lane 3: 20times diluted (20X) lysate-BSA−; Lane 4:Bacterial DNA (Bac)-BSA−; Lane 5: Bac- with 0.1% SDS-BSA−; M: 100 bp marker (Promega); Lane 6: Cr-with 1% BSA (BSA+); Lane 7: 10X lysate -BSA+; Lane 8: 20X lysate-BSA+; Lane 9: Bac-BSA+; Lane 10: Bac- with 0.1% SDS-BSA+; Lane 11: Cr-BSA−; Lane 12: 10X lysate-BSA−; Lane13:20X lysate-BSA−; Lane 14: Bac-BSA−; Lane 15: Bac- with 0.1% SDS-BSA−; M: 100 bp marker (Promega); Lane 16: Cr-BSA+; Lane 17: 10X lysate-BSA+; Lane 18: 20X lysate-BSA+; Lane 19: Bac-BSA+; Lane 20: Bac- with 0.1% SDS- BSA+
Fig. 2a Universal plant ITS primers depicted excellent resolution with the plant species tested. M: 100 bp marker (Promega); Lane 1: Mustard; Lane 2: Soybean; Lane 3: Pigeonpea; Lane 4: Wheat; Lane 5: Pea. b M: 100 bp marker (Promega); Lane 6: Tomato; Lane 7: Maize. c 100 bp marker (Promega); Lane 8: Dipterygium glaucum; Lane 9: Crotaleria burhia. d M: 100 bp marker (Promega); Lane 10:March Lilly; Lane 11: Bougainvillea; Lane 12: Indian blanket flower; Lane 13: Nerium; Lane 14: Petunia; Lane 15: Purple pirouette petunia; Lane 16: Moses-in-the-cradle; Lane 17: Golden cane palm; Lane 18: Duranta; Lane 19: Periwinkle; Lane 20: Chrysanthemum
Fig. 3ITS amplification using 30 days old template DNA of the different plant species stored at − 20 °C. M: 100 bp marker (Promega); Lane 1: Mustard; Lane 2: Soybean; Lane 3: Pigeonpea; Lane 4: Wheat; Lane 5: Pea
Fig. 4Amplification of ITS region of rice (varieties Improved Pusa Basmati 1 and KS Dev 12) using templates prepared in boiling water for 10 and 20 min. M: 100 bp marker (Promega); Lane 1: Improved Pusa Basmati 1_10 min; Lane 2: KS Dev 12_10 min; Lane 3: Improved Pusa Basmati 1_20 min; Lane 4: KS Dev 12_20min
Fig. 5Amplification of SSR markers RM18398 (Panel A) and RM26108 (Panel B) showed successful amplification in rice varieties. Panel A: M: 100 bp marker (Promega); Lane 1: Pusa basmati 1121; Lane 2: Improved Pusa Basmati 1; Lane 3: KS Dev 12; Lane 4: MTU 5204. Panel B: M: 100 bp marker (Promega); L1: Improved Pusa Basmati 1; L2: KS Dev 12
Fig. 6Comparative analysis of RAPD profiles of rHTTP and methods reported by Wang et al. (2016), Wang et al. (1993) and Satya et al. (2013). TKM13 and HUR917 varieties of rice were used for this PCR assay. Lane 2 to 9: Primer OPB06; Lane 10 to 16: Primer OPB07. M: 100 bp marker (Promega); Lane 1: TKM 13_Wang 2016; Lane 2: HUR 917_Wang 2016; Lane 3: TKM 13_Wang 1993; Lane 4: HUR 917_Wang 1993; Lane 5: TKM 13_Satya 2013; Lane 6: HUR 917_Satya 2013; Lane 7: TKM 13_rHTTP method; Lane 8: HUR 917_rHTTP method; M: 100 bp marker (Promega); Lane 9: TKM 13_Wang 2016; Lane 10: HUR 917_Wang 2016; Lane 11: TKM 13_Wang 1993; Lane 12: HUR 917_Wang 1993; Lane 13: TKM 13_Satya 2013; Lane 14: HUR 917_Satya 2013; Lane 15: TKM 13_rHTTP method; Lane 16: HUR 917_rHTTP method
Fig. 7Comparative amplification of rice ITS using universal primer. Rice varieties Rajendra Sweta, HUR917, and TKM13 were used for the assay. M: 100 bp marker (Promega); Lane 1: TKM 13_Wang 2016; Lane 2: HUR 917_Wang 2016; Lane 3: TKM 13_Wang 1993; Lane 4: HUR 917_Wang 1993; Lane 5: TKM 13_Satya 2013; Lane 6: HUR 917_Satya 2013; Lane 7: TKM 13_rHTTP method; Lane 8: HUR 917_rHTTP method; Lane 9: Rajendra sweta_rHTTP method
Comparison of rHTTP method with other reported methods of quick plant DNA extraction
| Rapid One Step Extraction (ROSE) method (Steiner et al., 1995) | Sucrose Prep Method (Berendzen et al. 2005) | NaOH Method (Wang et al., 1993) | NaOH Method (Satya et al. 2013) | NaOH Method (Wang et al., 2015) | rHTTP method (Present study) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type and form of plant material | Lyophilized plant tissue | Fresh tissue | Young tissue | Fresh tissue | Fresh tissue | Fresh/old tissue |
| Liquid nitrogen | No | Yes/Ice | No | No | No | No |
| Extraction/lysis buffer | Tris-HCl, EDTA, Sodium Sarkosyl sulfate, PVPP | Tris-HCl, NaCl, Sucrose | NaOH, Tris | NaOH, Tris-EDTA | NaOH | SDS |
| Instrumentation | Lyophilizer, Shaker, hybridization Oven/ Water bath | Water Bath/Thermal cycler, Centifuge, grinding assembly/Mortar pestle | Grinding assembly/ Mortar-pestle | Grinding assembly/ Mortar-pestle, Centrifuge | Grinding assembly/ Mortar-pestle/ centrifuge | Thermal cycler/hot plate/any means to boil water |
| Duration to make templates for PCR (as per original publication) | ~ 45 min after lyophilization | ~ 15 min | Should not be more than 10 min | 10–12 min | 5 min | 10 min |
| Actual time required to process five samples at a time | ND | 59 min (11.8 min per sample) *For larger number of samples time will increase proportionately due to grinding | 31 min (6.2 min per sample) *For larger number of samples time will increase proportionately due to grinding | 65 min (13 min per sample) *For larger number of samples time will increase proportionately due to grinding | 29 min (5.8 min per sample) *For larger number of samples time will increase proportionately due to grinding | 12.5 min (2.5 min per sample) *For larger number of samples, the time will remain almost same as there is no grinding or maceration. The time will be 10 min plus time required for pipetting 100 μl lysis buffer |
Comparison of rHTTP method with few commercially available kits
| Kits/methods | Time required per sample | Instrumentation | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
DNeasy Plant Mini Kit (Qiagen) | ~ 60 min | Grinding assembly/ Mortar-pestle, Centrifuge, vortex (6 centrifugation steps) | INR 282/− per prep |
Synergy™ 2.0 (OPS Diagnostics) | 43 min | Centrifuge, vortex (5 centrifugation steps) | INR 153/− per prep |
Plant DNA isolation reagent (Takara) | 30 min. | Centrifuge, vortex (3 centrifugation steps) | INR 138/− per prep |
Phire Plant Direct PCR Kit (Thermo Fisher Scientific) | – | Thermal cycler (sample lysis and PCR done in a single tube). Crushing and spinning required in Dilution protocol | INR 51/− per prep |
QuickExtract™ Plant DNA extraction solution (Lucigen) | 8 min | Heating device with temperature controller (it requires incubation at two different temperatures) | INR 40/− per prep |
| rHTTP method | 10 min | Thermal cycler/ heating device/ any means to boil water | INR 4.5/− per prep |