Methods for isolation of cell-free plasma DNA strongly affect DNA yield

Michael Fleischhacker, Bernd Schmidt, Sabine Weickmann, Debora M.I. Fersching, Gloria S. Leszinski, Barbara Siegele, Oliver J. Stötzer, Dorothea Nagel, Stefan Holdenrieder

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

100 Scopus citations

Abstract

Extracellular nucleic acids are present in plasma, serum, and other body fluids and their analysis has gained increasing attention during recent years. Because of the small quantity and highly fragmented nature of cell-free DNA in plasma and serum, a fast, efficient, and reliable isolation method is still a problem and so far there is no agreement on a standardized method. We used spin columns from commercial suppliers (QIAamp DNA Blood Midi Kit from Qiagen; NucleoSpin Kit from Macherey-Nagel; MagNA Pure isolation system from Roche Diagnostics) to isolate DNA from 44 plasma samples in parallel at laboratories in Berlin and Munich. DNA in all samples was quantified by real-time PCR on a LightCycler 480 using three different targets (GAPDH, ß-globin, ERV). The quantities of cell-free DNA for the different isolation methods and genes varied between medians of 1.6. ng/mL and 28.1. ng/mL. This considerable variation of absolute DNA values was mainly caused by the use of different isolation methods (P < 0.0001). Comparable results were achieved by the use of the genes GAPDH and ERV while higher values were obtained by use of ß-globin. The laboratory site had only minor influence on DNA yield when manual extraction methods were used.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2085-2088
Number of pages4
JournalClinica Chimica Acta
Volume412
Issue number23-24
DOIs
StatePublished - 20 Nov 2011
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Isolation method
  • Plasma DNA
  • Quantification
  • Real-time PCR

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