Removal of PCR Error Products and Unincorporated Primers by Metal-Chelate Affinity Chromatography

Abstract

Immobilized Metal Affinity Chromatography (IMAC) has been used for decades to purify proteins on the basis of amino acid content, especially surface-exposed histidines and 揾istidine tags� genetically added to recombinant proteins. We and others have extended the use of IMAC to purification of nucleic acids via interactions with the nucleotide bases, especially purines, of single-stranded RNA and DNA. We also have demonstrated the purification of plasmid DNA from contaminating genomic DNA by IMAC capture of selectively-denatured genomic DNA. Here we describe an efficient method of purifying PCR products by specifically removing error products, excess primers, and unincorporated dNTPs from PCR product mixtures using flow-through metal-chelate affinity adsorption. By flowing a PCR product mixture through a Cu2+-iminodiacetic acid (IDA) agarose spin column, 94�% of the dNTPs and nearly all the primers can be removed. Many of the error products commonly formed by Taq polymerase also are removed. Sequencing of the IMAC-processed PCR product gave base-calling accuracy comparable to that obtained with a commercial PCR product purification method. The results show that IMAC matrices (specifically Cu2+-IDA agarose) can be used for the purification of PCR products. Due to the generality of the base-specific mechanism of adsorption, IMAC matrices may also be used in the purification of oligonucleotides, cDNA, mRNA and micro RNAs.

Description

Keywords

polymerase chain reaction, DNA purification, Elution, Imidazole, Nucleotide sequencing, sequence alignment, olgonucleotides, histidine

Citation

Copyright 2012 PLoS ONE. Recommended citation: Kanakaraj, Indhu, David L. Jewell, Jason C. Murphy, George E. Fox, and Richard C. Willson. "Removal of PCR error products and unincorporated primers by metal-chelate affinity chromatography." PloS one 6, no. 1 (2011): e14512. DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0014512. URL: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0014512. Reproduced in accordance with the original publisher's licensing terms and with permission from the authors.