JoVE Logo

Iniciar sesión

15.3 : DNA Agarose Gel Electrophoresis

Agarose gel electrophoresis is a laboratory technique commonly used to separate DNA fragments by size. However, it can also be used to isolate and purify DNA fragments using a gel extraction protocol.

Gel extraction follows five major steps: running gel electrophoresis to separate fragments, isolating the individual bands, extracting DNA from those bands, and removing the dye and salts from the extracted mixture to obtain pure DNA.

In cloning experiments, both the insert and vector DNA fragments are obtained after digestion with restriction endonucleases. These DNA fragments of varying sizes are mixed with contaminants, such as enzymes, salts, etc., that can inhibit the ligation reaction that follows. Gel extraction is therefore used to obtain pure DNA fragments before ligation.

To set up a gel for extraction, a lower percent (0.7-0.8%) agarose solution is used to ensure efficient migration of the DNA bands. In addition, a wide-combed gel cast is used to obtain thick DNA bands that are easy to isolate. Then, gel electrophoresis is performed at a lower voltage to prevent heating of the gel and damage to the DNA.

Once gel electrophoresis is complete, the ethidium bromide-stained DNA is identified by exposing the gel to long-wavelength UV for a short time. Short exposure to UV radiation prevents damage to DNA. This is followed by cutting out the desired band using a clean razor blade.

The isolated gel slice containing the DNA fragment of interest is then processed through one of the commercially available gel extraction kits. All of these kits follow the same basic principle. First, the agarose gel is dissolved by a buffer solution containing salts, such as sodium iodide. Next, DNA is bound to a column containing an anionic resin and washed a few times with a dilute alcoholic solution to remove impurities. The column is then dried by spinning in a centrifuge. The pure DNA can now be eluted with buffer or deionized water.

Tags

DNA Agarose Gel ElectrophoresisGel ExtractionDNA FragmentsSize SeparationPurificationCloning ExperimentsVector DNAInsert DNARestriction EndonucleasesContaminantsLigation ReactionAgarose SolutionMigration Of DNA BandsWide combed Gel CastLower Voltage ElectrophoresisEthidium Bromide StainingUV ExposureGel Slice Isolation

Del capítulo 15:

article

Now Playing

15.3 : DNA Agarose Gel Electrophoresis

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

94.9K Vistas

article

15.1 : ADN recombinante

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

16.6K Vistas

article

15.2 : Aislamiento del ADN

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

37.3K Vistas

article

15.4 : Etiquetado de sondas de ADN

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

8.1K Vistas

article

15.5 : Hibridación Southern

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

18.0K Vistas

article

15.6 : Microarrays de ADN

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

17.1K Vistas

article

15.7 : ADN complementario

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

5.5K Vistas

article

15.8 : Hibridación fluorescente in-situ (FISH)

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

19.4K Vistas

article

15.9 : PCR - Reacción en Cadena de Polimerasa

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

83.2K Vistas

article

15.10 : RT-PCR en tiempo real

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

56.6K Vistas

article

15.11 : RACE - Amplificación rápida de extremos de ADNc

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

6.2K Vistas

article

15.12 : Secuenciación de Sanger

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

751.5K Vistas

article

15.13 : Secuenciación de nueva generación

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

86.3K Vistas

article

15.14 : Secuenciación de ARN

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

9.7K Vistas

article

15.15 : Anotación y ensamblaje del genoma

Estudiando el ADN y el ARN

18.7K Vistas

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacidad

Condiciones de uso

Políticas

Investigación

Educación

ACERCA DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Todos los derechos reservados