Abstract

Determining the concentration of nucleic acids in biological samples precisely and reliably still is a challenge. In particular when only very small sample quantities are available for analysis, the established fluorescence-based methods give insufficient results. Photobleaching is seen as the main reason for this. In this paper we present a method to correct for the photobleaching effect. Using confocal microscopy with single molecule sensitivity, we derived calibration curves from DNA solutions with defined fragment length. We analyzed dilution series over a wide range of concentrations (1 pg/μl-1000 pg/μl) and measured their specific diffusion coefficients employing fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. Using this information, we corrected the measured fluorescence intensity of the calibration solutions for photobleaching effects. We evaluated our method by analyzing a series of DNA mixtures of varying composition. For fragments smaller than 1000 bp, our method allows to determine sample concentrations with high precision in very small sample quantities (< 2 μl with concentrations < 20 pg/μl). Once the technical parameters are determined and remain stable in an established process, our improved calibration method will make measuring molecular biological samples of unknown sequence composition more efficient, accurate and sample-saving than previous methods.

Highlights

  • In molecular biology, precise knowledge of molecule concentrations, especially nucleic acid concentration, is required

  • PCR-based methods can analyze nucleic acid samples consisting of only a few templates and are widely used in molecular biology [5, 6]

  • PCR-based methods cannot help in the analysis of nucleic acid mixtures of unknown sequences

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Summary

Introduction

Precise knowledge of molecule concentrations, especially nucleic acid concentration, is required. Various methods, such as molecular cloning or sequencing involve nucleic acids and depend on precise concentration data [1, 2]. PCR-based methods can analyze nucleic acid samples consisting of only a few templates and are widely used in molecular biology [5, 6]. These methods rely on sequence information from the sample. Fluorescence measurements are highly promising for this task because of their extraordinary

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