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Accurate Analysis of Double Stranded DNA over an Extended Size Range

Applications | 2019 | SCIEXInstrumentation
Capillary electrophoresis
Industries
Clinical Research
Manufacturer
SCIEX

Summary

Significance of the Topic


The accurate sizing of double stranded DNA fragments is critical in biopharmaceutical development, gene therapy vector characterization and vaccine production. Regulatory agencies require precise fragment maps and size validation to ensure product safety and consistency. Traditional agarose gels and microchip methods often lack the resolution, dynamic range and reproducibility needed for extended DNA size analysis.

Objectives and Overview of the Study


This technical note evaluates a capillary electrophoresis–laser induced fluorescence method for sizing double stranded DNA fragments from 100 base pairs to 15 kilo base pairs. The work demonstrates resolution, sizing accuracy, sensitivity, dynamic range and repeatability using SCIEX dsDNA 1000 reagents, LIFluor EnhanCE stain and a coated DNA capillary on the PA 800 Plus system.

Methodology and Instrumentation


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  • Gel preparation and rehydration protocol for dsDNA 1000 gel buffer
  • Capillary assembly with 30 cm or 40 cm effective length coated DNA capillary
  • Instrument setup on PA 800 Plus with LIF detector at 488 nm excitation and 520 nm emission
  • LIF calibration using Performance Test Mix to target detector response
  • Sample injection by pressure or electrokinetic methods and separation at voltages from 5 to 12 kV
  • Data acquisition and quantitative analysis using 32 Karat software

  • Main Results and Discussion


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  • Baseline resolution of all eleven φX174 Hae III fragments, including pairs differing by 10 bp, within a 25-minute run
  • Highly linear size calibration using a quartic model with R² > 0.999 on linear and log scales
  • Limit of detection of 0.79 ng/ml and limit of quantitation around 1 ng/ml for an 872 bp fragment; dynamic range of 2.7 log
  • Excellent repeatability: migration time RSD < 0.5% and corrected peak area RSD < 2.5%
  • Extended size coverage demonstrated with 1 kb and 1 kb plus DNA ladders, accurately sizing fragments from 75 bp to 15 kb with deviations under 7%
  • Flexibility in injection mode: pressure injection gave superior resolution for small fragments, electrokinetic injection provided robust analysis of mixed samples

  • Benefits and Practical Applications of the Method


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  • Improved resolution compared with agarose gels, enabling discrimination down to 6–10 bp differences at 200–300 bp
  • Single gel matrix for sizes from 72 bp to 15 kb simplifies workflow
  • High sensitivity and reproducibility support routine QC and investigational new drug filings
  • Extended kit shelf life of 15 months reduces cost and waste
  • Co-injection of sample and size standards enhances accuracy of fragment sizing

  • Future Trends and Applications


    As nucleic acid therapeutics diversify, demand will grow for higher throughput CE-LIF platforms, integrated microfluidic workflows and advanced data analytics. Combining this method with multiplexed labeling, automated sample handling and real-time monitoring will support complex vector characterization, host cell DNA quantitation and novel vaccine formats.

    Conclusion


    The CE-LIF approach using SCIEX dsDNA 1000 gel, coated capillaries and LIFluor EnhanCE stain delivers precise, sensitive and reproducible sizing of dsDNA fragments over an extended range. It meets regulatory expectations and offers a robust alternative to traditional gel electrophoresis for biopharma quality control and research applications.

    References


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  • Guidance for FDA review of CMC information for human gene therapy INDs, 2008
  • FDA draft guidance on CMC for human gene therapy INDs, 2018
  • Sanger F et al 1978 The nucleotide sequence of bacteriophage phiX174 J Mol Biol 125 225–246
  • Middleton et al 1972 Fragments of phiX174 DNA by HaeIII endonuclease J Virol 10 42–50
  • FDA guidance on cell substrates in viral vaccine production, 2010
  • Shen et al 2013 Size analysis of residual host cell DNA by capillary gel electrophoresis Biologicals 41 201–208
  • Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.

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