Yun Fang1,2,3,4, Meiying Xu1,4, Xingjuan Chen1,4, Guoping Sun1,4, Jun Guo1,4, Weimin Wu5, Xueduan Liu2,3
1Guangdong Institute of Microbiology, Guangzhou, China
2School of Minerals Processing and Bioengineering, Central South University, Changsha, China
3Key Laboratory of Biometallurgy of Ministry of Education, Changsha, China
4State Key Laboratory of Applied Microbiology (Ministry-Guangdong Province Jointly Breeding Base), Guangzhou, China
5Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Center for Sustainable Development & Global Competitiveness, Stanford University, Stanford, USA
Tóm tắt
Extraction of high-quality microbial DNA from contaminated environmental samples is an essential step in microbial ecological study. Based on previously published methods for soil and sediment samples, a modified pretreatment method was developed for extracting microbial DNA from heavily contaminated river sediment samples via selection of optimal pretreatment parameters (i.e., reagent solution, reaction duration, and temperature). The pretreatment procedure involves washing the river sediment sample for three times with a solution containing 0.1 mol·L−1 ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA), 0.1 mol·L−1 Tris (pH 8.0), 1.5 mol·L−1 NaCl, 0.1 mol·L−1 NaH2PO4, and Na2HPO4 at 65°C with 180 r·min−1 for 15 min to remove humic materials and heavy metals prior to the employment of standard DNA extraction procedures. We compared the results of standard procedure DNA extraction following pretreatment, without pretreatment, and with using a commercial PowerSoil™ DNA Isolation Kit. The results indicated that the pretreatment significantly improved the DNA quality based on DNA yield, DNA fragment length, and determination of prokaryotic diversity. Prokaryotic diversity exhibited in the DNA with the pretreatment was also considerably higher than that extracted with the PowerSoil™ DNA Isolation Kit only. The pretreatment method worked well even with a small amount of sediment sample (0.25 g or even lower). The method provides a novel, simple, cost-effective tool for DNA extraction for microbial community analysis in environmental monitoring and remediation processes.