A rapid and inexpensive method for the direct PCR amplification of DNA from plants

Am J Bot. 2010 Jul;97(7):e65-8. doi: 10.3732/ajb.1000181.

Abstract

Premise of the study: We present a rapid and inexpensive alternative to DNA isolation for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification from plants. •

Methods and results: The method involves direct PCR amplification from material macerated in one buffer, followed by dilution and incubation in a second buffer. We describe the procedure and demonstrate its application for nuclear and plastid DNA amplification across a broad range of vascular plants. •

Conclusions: The method is fast, easy to perform, cost-effective, and consequently ideal for large sample numbers. It represents a considerable simplification of present approaches requiring DNA isolation prior to PCR amplification and will be useful in plant systematics and biotechnology, including applications such as DNA barcoding.