UV Quantitation of DNA
DNA absorbs ultraviolet light due to its highly conjugated nature. DNA may thus be easily quantitated in a UV spectrometer.
Typically, 1 OD260 (i.e. a solution having an absorbance of one unit at 260 nm with a path length of 1 cm) is said to correspond to a concentration of 30-37 ug per ml. This is for single stranded DNA with an equal mixture of each of the four bases. RNA or double stranded DNA have values of 40 and 50 mg per ml, respectively.
For work with DNA longer than probes and primers, these assumptions are valid because the constituent bases are usually fairly evenly represented. With oligos, however, the base composition may be highly skewed. For instance, 1 OD of a sequence of all cytidines would correspond to 39.4 μg/ml and 1 OD of a sequence of all adenosites would correspond to 22.8 μg/ml.
Since the composition and sequence of the oligo are usually known, this information may be used to calculate individualized values for more accurate quantitation.
Equations
Values are calculated by either of two similar methods. The following equations is the simplest:
1. μg 1 -- = -------------------------------------------------- ml (15400A+7400C+11500G+8700T) ------------------------------ 1000*(312A+288C+328G+303T-61)
A, C, G, and T are simply the number of each base in the oligo. This equation simply averages the extinction coefficients (in L/mol-Table 1) of each base and divides by the molecular weight (g/mol).
Table 1. |
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The previous equation ignores the interactions of adjacent bases and a more accurate equation includes nearest neighbor interactions:
2. μg 1 -- = -------------------------------------------------- ml 2*Sum(Eab)-(E2+E3+...+E(n-2)+E(n-1)) -------------------------------------- 1000*(312A+288C+328G+303T-61)
Where sum(Eab) is the sum of the pairwise extinction coefficients (Table 2) and the E values are the normal single extinction coefficients for each individual base. (Please note that the first and last bases' extinction coefficients, E1 and E2 , are not subtracted.) The pairwise values can be found in Table 2.
Both of these equations give good results. The difference between them is rarely more than a few μg per mil.
Table 2. | Pairwise extinction coefficients |
3' Base | |||||
A | C | G | T | ||
5' Base | A | 13,700 | 10,600 | 12,500 | 11,400 |
C | 10,600 | 7,300 | 9,000 | 7,600 | |
G | 12,600 | 8,800 | 10,800 | 10,000 | |
T | 11,700 | 8,100 | 9,500 | 8,400 |
Sigma-Genosys uses equation 2 to determine the extinction coefficient of your oligo.