Fragmentation of DNA affects the accuracy of the DNA quantitation by the commonly used methods

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Specific applications and modern technologies, like non-invasive prenatal testing, non-invasive cancer diagnostic and next generation sequencing, are currently in the focus of researchers worldwide. These have common characteristics...

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Main Authors: Sedlackova Tatiana, Repiska Gabriela, Celec Peter, Szemes Tomas, Minarik Gabriel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2013-02-01
Series:Biological Procedures Online
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.biologicalproceduresonline.com/content/15/1/5
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spelling doaj-1baa22ac562c4cbf821a812be3497f222020-11-24T21:28:31ZengBMCBiological Procedures Online1480-92222013-02-01151510.1186/1480-9222-15-5Fragmentation of DNA affects the accuracy of the DNA quantitation by the commonly used methodsSedlackova TatianaRepiska GabrielaCelec PeterSzemes TomasMinarik Gabriel<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Specific applications and modern technologies, like non-invasive prenatal testing, non-invasive cancer diagnostic and next generation sequencing, are currently in the focus of researchers worldwide. These have common characteristics in use of highly fragmented DNA molecules for analysis. Hence, for the performance of molecular methods, DNA concentration is a crucial parameter; we compared the influence of different levels of DNA fragmentation on the accuracy of DNA concentration measurements.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In our comparison, the performance of the currently most commonly used methods for DNA concentration measurement (spectrophotometric, fluorometric and qPCR based) were tested on artificially fragmented DNA samples. In our comparison, unfragmented and three specifically fragmented DNA samples were used.</p> <p>According to our results, the level of fragmentation did not influence the accuracy of spectrophotometric measurements of DNA concentration, while other methods, fluorometric as well as qPCR-based, were significantly influenced and a decrease in measured concentration was observed with more intensive DNA fragmentation.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our study has confirmed that the level of fragmentation of DNA has significant impact on accuracy of DNA concentration measurement with two of three mostly used methods (PicoGreen and qPCR). Only spectrophotometric measurement was not influenced by the level of fragmentation, but sensitivity of this method was lowest among the three tested. Therefore if it is possible the DNA quantification should be performed with use of equally fragmented control DNA.</p> http://www.biologicalproceduresonline.com/content/15/1/5DNA fragmentationDNA quantitationSpectrophotometryPicoGreenqPCR
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sedlackova Tatiana
Repiska Gabriela
Celec Peter
Szemes Tomas
Minarik Gabriel
spellingShingle Sedlackova Tatiana
Repiska Gabriela
Celec Peter
Szemes Tomas
Minarik Gabriel
Fragmentation of DNA affects the accuracy of the DNA quantitation by the commonly used methods
Biological Procedures Online
DNA fragmentation
DNA quantitation
Spectrophotometry
PicoGreen
qPCR
author_facet Sedlackova Tatiana
Repiska Gabriela
Celec Peter
Szemes Tomas
Minarik Gabriel
author_sort Sedlackova Tatiana
title Fragmentation of DNA affects the accuracy of the DNA quantitation by the commonly used methods
title_short Fragmentation of DNA affects the accuracy of the DNA quantitation by the commonly used methods
title_full Fragmentation of DNA affects the accuracy of the DNA quantitation by the commonly used methods
title_fullStr Fragmentation of DNA affects the accuracy of the DNA quantitation by the commonly used methods
title_full_unstemmed Fragmentation of DNA affects the accuracy of the DNA quantitation by the commonly used methods
title_sort fragmentation of dna affects the accuracy of the dna quantitation by the commonly used methods
publisher BMC
series Biological Procedures Online
issn 1480-9222
publishDate 2013-02-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Specific applications and modern technologies, like non-invasive prenatal testing, non-invasive cancer diagnostic and next generation sequencing, are currently in the focus of researchers worldwide. These have common characteristics in use of highly fragmented DNA molecules for analysis. Hence, for the performance of molecular methods, DNA concentration is a crucial parameter; we compared the influence of different levels of DNA fragmentation on the accuracy of DNA concentration measurements.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In our comparison, the performance of the currently most commonly used methods for DNA concentration measurement (spectrophotometric, fluorometric and qPCR based) were tested on artificially fragmented DNA samples. In our comparison, unfragmented and three specifically fragmented DNA samples were used.</p> <p>According to our results, the level of fragmentation did not influence the accuracy of spectrophotometric measurements of DNA concentration, while other methods, fluorometric as well as qPCR-based, were significantly influenced and a decrease in measured concentration was observed with more intensive DNA fragmentation.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our study has confirmed that the level of fragmentation of DNA has significant impact on accuracy of DNA concentration measurement with two of three mostly used methods (PicoGreen and qPCR). Only spectrophotometric measurement was not influenced by the level of fragmentation, but sensitivity of this method was lowest among the three tested. Therefore if it is possible the DNA quantification should be performed with use of equally fragmented control DNA.</p>
topic DNA fragmentation
DNA quantitation
Spectrophotometry
PicoGreen
qPCR
url http://www.biologicalproceduresonline.com/content/15/1/5
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AT repiskagabriela fragmentationofdnaaffectstheaccuracyofthednaquantitationbythecommonlyusedmethods
AT celecpeter fragmentationofdnaaffectstheaccuracyofthednaquantitationbythecommonlyusedmethods
AT szemestomas fragmentationofdnaaffectstheaccuracyofthednaquantitationbythecommonlyusedmethods
AT minarikgabriel fragmentationofdnaaffectstheaccuracyofthednaquantitationbythecommonlyusedmethods
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