.:
Rapid eluition of DNA from agarose gels :.
Materials
650
microliter Eppendorf tubes
1.7 ml
Eppendorf tubes
Sterile
silanized glass wool
Hypodermic needle and syringe
Glass wool spin column preparation
1.
Using a clean hypodermic needle, drive a hole in the end of a 650
microliter Eppendorf tube from the inside then cut off the cap.
2.
Wearing gloves, pull off a small piece of glass wool and roll it
into a ball between hands. Place the glass wool plug in the bottom
of the 650 microliter tube. You may need to use a 1ml pipet tip to
pack the glass wool in the bottom of the tube. Do not cut the glass
wool, as this may produce small glass fibers that can pass through
the hole in the small tube.
3.
Place the tube with the glass wool in a 1.7ml Eppendorf tube. This
completed spin column is now ready for use.
Eluting DNA from agarose gel fragments
1.
Visualize ethidium bromide stained agarose gel with a
transilluminator on low setting. Working quickly to minimize UV
exposure to the DNA, excise the fragment of interest with a clean
razor blade. After removing excess liquid with a Kimwipe, place the
agarose fragment in the spin column.
2.
Centrifuge the tube at 2874 xg for no more than 45 seconds to
elute the DNA. Spinning longer coelutes substances that are
inhibitory to further enzymatic reactions. 2874 xg corresponds to
5500rpm for Eppendorf centrifuge model 5415; 5000rpm for model 5417.
3.
Using a transilluminator, check eluent in bottom of outer tube for
the presence of ethidium bromide stained DNA.
4. The
eluted DNA can now be used directly in enzymatic reactions. For
ligations, no more than 40% of the total reaction volume should be
eluted DNA, as this reduces ligation efficiencies.
5. The
DNA fragments can be further purified by ethanol precipitation. The
addition of 2-4 micrograms of carrier tRNA prior to precipitation
can increase yield, and its presence in ligation reactions is
non-inhibitory
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