Acid guanidinium thiocyanate-phenol-chloroform extraction (abbreviated AGPC) is a liquid–liquid extraction technique in biochemistry and molecular biology. It is widely used for isolating RNA (as well as DNA and protein in some cases). This method may take longer than a column-based system such as the silica-based purification, but has higher purity and the advantage of high recovery of RNA.[1] Furthermore, an RNA column is typically unsuitable for purification of short (<200 nucleotides) RNA species, such as siRNA, miRNA and tRNA.
It was originally devised by Piotr Chomczynski and Nicoletta Sacchi, who published their protocol in 1987.[2][3] The reagent is sold by Sigma-Aldrich by the name TRI Reagent; by Invitrogen under the name TRIzol; by Bioline as Trisure; and by Tel-Test as STAT-60.
Source: Wikipedia. License: CC BY-SA 4.0. Changes may have been made. See authors on source page history.
Eksplorasi konten lain dari Tinta Emas
Berlangganan untuk dapatkan pos terbaru lewat email.