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An Application of Salivary DNA in Twin Research of Chinese Children
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 February 2012
Abstract
Since saliva collection is noninvasive, painless and inexpensive, it may become an alternative to obtain genomic DNA, which is critical to evaluate zygosity and the role of genetic factors in twin research. This study provided a rough description of salivary DNA in Chinese twin children, and presented the DNA yield and quality extracted from saliva in a large-scale children sample, which supplied an example for saliva sample using in genetic epidemiology. Three milliliters of saliva was collected from 356 twin children aged 6 to 15, and DNA was extracted by a com mercial DNA isolation kit. The DNA yield and purity was determined by spectrophotometry at 260nm and 280nm. The zygosity determination of the same-sex twins and the assay of Polymerase Chain Reaction-Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism indicated the quality of salivary DNA. The amount of extracted DNA from three milliliters of saliva was about 34.91μg (2.20 ~ 122.04μg), average OD260/280 values was 1.84. Saliva DNA is a reliable sample for the determination of twins' zygosity. We conclude that saliva may be a feasible and reliable source of DNA for genetic epidemiology studies, especially for twin research.
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