Comparison and Optimization of DNA Extraction Methods from Cervical Cells Collected in ThinPrep® PreservCyt
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.26537/citotech.vi5.3778Keywords:
Cervical cancer, HPV, DNA, Extraction, DNA methylationAbstract
Cervical cancer is the ninth leading cancer in women in Portugal. Cervical cancer screening
methods have changed since the implementation of the cytology-based test developed by George
Papanicolaou until the human papillomavirus-based screening. Nowadays, new biomarkers like
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) methylation has been proposed as potential triage method of samples
testing positive for human papillomavirus
The aim of this study was to optimize and compare three different DNA extraction methods for
further methylation analysis. DNA from sixteen cervical samples collected in ThinPrep® PreservCyt was
extracted by the phenol-chloroform method, by QIAamp® MinElute™ Media kit (QIAGEN, Hilden) and
by Blood DNA Isolation Mini Kit (Norgen Biotek, Ontario). After quantification, DNA was modified by
Sodium Bisulfite and amplified by Quantitative Specific Methylation Polymerase Chain Reaction for β-
Actin gene. Finally, Cycle threshold (Ct) mean values were evaluated.
The phenol-chloroform method had the higher sample input and, consequently allowed for a higher
DNA quantity. Fifteen mL of sample allowed for get 13500ng with the phenol-chloroform method
meanwhile 2mL of sample provided 8940ng with QIAamp® MinElute™ Media kit and 927ng with Blood
DNA Isolation Mini Kit. However, commercial kits presented higher efficiency and advantages as being
less time consuming and easier to perform. No significant differences were observed for amplification Ct
values between the three DNA extraction methods neither between samples archived for ten or fourteen
months.
Concluding, the three methods provided DNA to amplification but the optimization of commercial
kits turned out to be more advantageous.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2019 Citotech Online - Case Review
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.