• Cells that are to be studied need to be collected. • Breaking the
cell membranes open exposes the DNA along with the cytoplasm within (
cell lysis). • Lipids from the cell membrane and the nucleus are broken down with
detergents and
surfactants. • Breaking down
proteins by adding a
protease (optional). • Breaking down
RNA by adding an
RNase (optional). • The solution is treated with a concentrated salt solution (saline) to make debris such as broken proteins, lipids, and RNA clump together. •
Centrifugation of the solution, which separates the clumped cellular debris from the DNA. • DNA purification from detergents, proteins, salts, and reagents is used during the cell lysis step. The most commonly used procedures are: •
Ethanol precipitation usually by ice-cold
ethanol or
isopropanol. Since DNA is insoluble in these alcohols, it will aggregate together, giving a
pellet upon
centrifugation. Precipitation of DNA is improved by increasing ionic strength, usually by adding
sodium acetate. •
Phenol–chloroform extraction in which
phenol denatures proteins in the sample. After centrifugation of the sample, denatured proteins stay in the organic phase while the aqueous phase containing
nucleic acid is mixed with
chloroform to remove phenol residues from the solution. •
Minicolumn purification relies on the fact that the
nucleic acids may bind (
adsorption) to the solid phase (silica or other) depending on the
pH and the salt concentration of the buffer. Cellular and
histone proteins bound to the DNA can be removed either by adding a
protease or having precipitated the proteins with
sodium or
ammonium acetate or
extracted them with a phenol-chloroform mixture before the DNA precipitation. After isolation, the DNA is dissolved in a slightly alkaline buffer, usually in a
TE buffer, or in
ultra-pure water. == Common chemicals ==