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Salt drying: a low‐cost, simple and efficient method for storing plants in the field and preserving biological repositories for DNA diversity research
Author(s) -
Carrió Elena,
Rosselló Josep A.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
molecular ecology resources
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.96
H-Index - 136
eISSN - 1755-0998
pISSN - 1755-098X
DOI - 10.1111/1755-0998.12170
Subject(s) - dna extraction , dehydration , biology , salting , food spoilage , polymerase chain reaction , sodium , food science , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , materials science , bacteria , genetics , gene , metallurgy
Although a variety of methods have been optimized for the collection and storage of plant specimens, most of these are not suited for field expeditions for a variety of logistic reasons. Drying specimens with silica gel in polyethylene bags is currently the standard for field‐sampling methods that are suitable for subsequent DNA extraction. However, silica‐gel repositories are not readily available in remote areas, and its use is not very cost‐effective for the long‐term storage of collections or in developing countries with limited research budgets. Salting is an ancient and traditional drying process that preserves food samples by dehydrating tissues and inhibiting water‐dependent cellular metabolism. We compared salt and silica‐gel drying methods with respect to dehydration rates overtime, DNA quality and polymerase chain reaction( PCR ) success to assess whether dry salting can be used as an effective plant preservation method for DNA analysis. Specimens from eleven plant species covering a variety of leaf structures, leaf thicknesses and water contents were analysed. Experimental work indicated that (i) levels of dehydration in sodium chloride were usually comparable to those obtained when silica gel was used, (ii) no spoilage, fungal or bacterial growth was observed for any of the species with all drying treatments and (iii) good yields of quality genomic DNA suitable for PCR applications were obtained in the salt‐drying treatments. The preservation of plant tissues in commercial table salt appears to be a satisfactory, and versatile method that may be suitable in remote areas where cryogenic resources and silica repositories are not available.