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Ref: Cytometry 2001, Vol 43(2), p101-109. Get
article in PDF format here
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Slide denaturing
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Slide and
probe denaturing can be performed together (called "simultaneous
or direct denaturing") or separate (called "separate
or indirect denaturing"). Numerous experiments with both commercial
and custom prepared probes, from plasmids or cosmids to complex microdissected
or painting probes showed that results were similar with both procedures.
The main difference was that the simultaneous denaturing protocol (which
is shorter) required a larger amount of competitor DNA (Cot1-DNA).
- In the simultaneous
denaturing process, the slide can be placed directly
on a heated metal block for 2 minutes at 72-80° C. This procedure
benefits from a longer chemical aging process (1-2 minutes instead
of 10-15 seconds) to preserve chromosome morphology. In this lab,
we are routinely denaturing slides on the metal block of a thermocycler.
The block is programmed to (1) increase gradually (90 seconds)
the temperature to 75° C, (2) hold the temperature 90
seconds at 75° C and (3) to gradually (90 seconds) decrease
the temperature back to the room value. This gradual heating and
cooling is gentler on the chromosomes and requires just a few seconds
of aging in ethanol prior to denaturing. Chromosome architecture
is preserved better and hybridization is very efficient.
- In the separate
denaturing protocol, slides and DNA probes are separately denatured.
Slides are denatured in 70%formamide(FA)/2xSSC in a Coplin jar at
75° C, followed by rinsing, 3 minutes each in 70% and 100%
ethanol at room temperature. The use of ice cold ethanol should
be avoided, as sudden temperature changes affect chromosome morphology.
Gradual heating and cooling of the slide can be applied to the separate
denaturing process as well, in one of two ways. (1) 150-200ul
70%FA/2xSSC are pipetted directly on the slide, covered with a coverslip
and the slide is denatured gradually on the metal block of a thermocycler
(as described). The coverslip is removed, and the slide is rinsed
in 70% and 100% ethanol, air dried and used. (2) Three jars
with 70%FA/2xSSC solution are heated at 45° C, 60° C and
75° C, respectively. Slides are kept 5-10 seconds each in the
45° C and 60° C solutions, then incubated 90-120 seconds
at 75° C and kept again 5-10 seconds each in the 60° C
and 45° C solutions. Denaturing is followed by brief rinsing
in 70% and 100% ethanol and air drying. This denaturing approach
is gentler on chromosome morphology and eliminates the need of a
thermocycler, for laboratories not equipped with one.
Regardless
of the denaturing protocol, it is best that ethanol solutions used for
rinsing slides are not chilled, but kept at room temperature. This prevents
exposing the slides to large temperature variations. We noticed that,
placing slides directly into the hot formamide solution (75° C),
or from this solution directly into ice-cold ethanol, results in distorted
chromosome morphology without improved denaturation. Gradual heating
and cooling proved just as efficient, and preserved chromosome morphology
much better. The reason DNA remains denatured after gradual cooling
is that formamide numerous breaks into the DNA. It is at these breaks
that the two strands of DNA uncoil and stay denatured. Simple fiber-stretching
experiments or fiber FISH can prove this phenomenon.
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Last modified on: Feb12, 2001
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