Evaluation of sieving matrices used to separate alleles by cycling temperature capillary electrophoresis

Electrophoresis. 2006 May;27(10):1878-85. doi: 10.1002/elps.200500642.

Abstract

Denaturing CE (DCE) is a powerful tool for analysis of DNA variation. The development of commercial multi-CE instruments allows large-scale studies of DNA variation (many samples and many fragments). However, the cost of consumables like capillary arrays and sieving matrix might limit the use of DCE in such studies. Thus, we have tested 72 different in-house formulated sieving matrices' ability to suppress EOF and separate PCR-amplified alleles with the DCE variant, cycling temperature CE (CTCE). The data herein demonstrate that alleles can be baseline-separated by use of PVP and poly(N,N-dimethyl acrylamide) polymers at various percentages and pH. Allele separation by CTCE is matrix-independent and consequently applicable to any capillary instrument used for DNA separation. Formulation of sieving matrix for CTCE was done by dissolving appropriate amount of polymer powder into the running buffers. Allele separation was observed at different pH (7.5-8.5), concentrations and molecular size of the polymer, without compromising the separation and reproducibility. Finally, the cost reduction of homemade matrices is more than 1000-fold as compared to commercial sieving matrices.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Acrylic Resins
  • Alleles*
  • Base Sequence
  • DNA / chemistry
  • DNA / genetics*
  • DNA / isolation & purification*
  • DNA Primers / genetics
  • Electrophoresis, Capillary / methods*
  • Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
  • Mutation
  • Nucleic Acid Denaturation
  • Polymerase Chain Reaction
  • Temperature

Substances

  • Acrylic Resins
  • DNA Primers
  • polyacrylamide
  • DNA