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Automation of DNA and miRNA co‐extraction for miRNA‐based identification of human body fluids and tissues
Author(s) -
Kulstein Galina,
Marienfeld Ralf,
Miltner Erich,
Wiegand Peter
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
electrophoresis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.666
H-Index - 158
eISSN - 1522-2683
pISSN - 0173-0835
DOI - 10.1002/elps.201600365
Subject(s) - dna extraction , microrna , computational biology , saliva , biology , dna , extraction (chemistry) , chromatography , bioinformatics , polymerase chain reaction , genetics , chemistry , gene , biochemistry
In the last years, microRNA (miRNA) analysis came into focus in the field of forensic genetics. Yet, no standardized and recommendable protocols for co‐isolation of miRNA and DNA from forensic relevant samples have been developed so far. Hence, this study evaluated the performance of an automated Maxwell® 16 System‐based strategy (Promega) for co‐extraction of DNA and miRNA from forensically relevant (blood and saliva) samples compared to (semi‐)manual extraction methods. Three procedures were compared on the basis of recovered quantity of DNA and miRNA (as determined by real‐time PCR and Bioanalyzer), miRNA profiling (shown by Cq values and extraction efficiency), STR profiles, duration, contamination risk and handling. All in all, the results highlight that the automated co‐extraction procedure yielded the highest miRNA and DNA amounts from saliva and blood samples compared to both (semi‐)manual protocols. Also, for aged and genuine samples of forensically relevant traces the miRNA and DNA yields were sufficient for subsequent downstream analysis. Furthermore, the strategy allows miRNA extraction only in cases where it is relevant to obtain additional information about the sample type. Besides, this system enables flexible sample throughput and labor‐saving sample processing with reduced risk of cross‐contamination.