Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2091502 Journal of Microbiological Methods 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Purification of microbial DNA from soil is challenging due to the co-extraction of humic acids and associated phenolic compounds that inhibit subsequent cloning, amplification or sequencing. Removal of these contaminants is critical for the success of metagenomic library construction and high-throughput sequencing of extracted DNA. Using three different composite soil samples, we compared a novel DNA purification technique using nonlinear electrophoresis on the synchronous coefficient of drag alteration (SCODA) instrument with alternate purification methods such as direct current (DC) agarose gel electrophoresis followed by gel filtration or anion exchange chromatography, Wizard DNA Clean-Up System, and the PowerSoil DNA Isolation kit. Both nonlinear and DC electrophoresis were effective at retrieving high-molecular weight DNA with high purity, suitable for construction of large-insert libraries. The PowerSoil DNA Isolation kit and the nonlinear electrophoresis had high recovery of high purity DNA suitable for sequencing purposes. All methods demonstrated high consistency in the bacterial community profiles generated from the DNA extracts. Nonlinear electrophoresis using the SCODA instrument was the ideal methodology for the preparation of soil DNA samples suitable for both high-throughput sequencing and large-insert cloning applications.

► We assess nonlinear electrophoresis for purifying soil DNA. ► We compare nonlinear electrophoresis with other purification methods. ► Nonlinear electrophoresis retrieved high purity, high-molecular weight DNA. ► DNA was suitable for construction of large-insert libraries. ► Ideal methodology based on convenience, DNA purity and molecular weight.

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Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Biotechnology
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