1. Verification of performance of a direct fluorescent assay for cell-free DNA quantification, stability according to pre-analytical storage conditions, and the effect of freeze-thawing.
- Author
-
Kim, Jae-Joon, Park, Kwonoh, Han, Yu Ran, Kim, Syed Hyun, Oh, Sang-Bo, Oh, So Yeon, Hong, Yun Jeong, and Yun, Mi Sook
- Subjects
- *
CELL-free DNA , *PLASMA products , *NUCLEIC acids , *GENE amplification , *NUCLEIC acid isolation methods , *CRYOPRESERVATION of cells , *PLASMA materials processing - Abstract
A simple fluorescence-based cell-free DNA (CFD) assay has been previously developed that can directly measure nucleic acids without prior DNA extraction and amplification. However, studies on fluorescence-based CFD are lacking. In particular, there is no known information regarding the stability with regard to pre-analytical storage conditions in relation to time and temperature, or on the influence of freeze-thawing. Plasma was directly assayed to measure CFD using PicoGreen™ reagent. Standard linearity and accuracy were confirmed using salmon sperm DNA. Whole blood was left at room temperature (RT) and at 4˚C, and then plasma was separated. The CFD was also measured using thawed plasma after 1 week of freezing. As a correlation with a sperm DNA concentration, CFD demonstrated linearity over a wide range of concentrations, with a 0.998 correlation coefficient. The CFD level showed a change of up to 2.5 µg/ml according to pre-analytical storage time, and the changes were not consistent over time. The CFD values at RT after 1 h were similar to the baseline values, and the relative standard deviation was lowest under this condition. The CFD values between 4˚C and RT were similar over all time periods assessed. After freeze-thawing, the change in CFD value was reduced compared to that before freezing. The present study showed that CFD measurements using plasma processed within 1 h were optimal. Additionally, the effects of substantial changes according to storage conditions were reduced after freeze-thawing, and thus studies using stored samples is viable and relevant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF