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      Purification of RNA using TRIzol (TRI reagent).

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          Abstract

          TRIzol solubilization and extraction is a relatively recently developed general method for deproteinizing RNA. This method is particularly advantageous in situations where cells or tissues are enriched for endogenous RNases or when separation of cytoplasmic RNA from nuclear RNA is impractical. TRIzol (or TRI Reagent) is a monophasic solution of phenol and guanidinium isothiocyanate that simultaneously solubilizes biological material and denatures protein. After solubilization, the addition of chloroform causes phase separation (much like extraction with phenol:chloroform:isoamyl alcohol), where protein is extracted to the organic phase, DNA resolves at the interface, and RNA remains in the aqueous phase. Therefore, RNA, DNA, and protein can be purified from a single sample (hence, the name TRIzol). TRIzol extraction is also an effective method for isolating small RNAs, such as microRNAs, piwi-associated RNAs, or endogeneous, small interfering RNAs. However, TRIzol is expensive and RNA pellets can be difficult to resuspend. Thus, the use of TRIzol is not recommend when regular phenol extraction is practical.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Cold Spring Harb Protoc
          Cold Spring Harbor protocols
          Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
          1559-6095
          1559-6095
          Jun 2010
          : 2010
          : 6
          Article
          2010/6/pdb.prot5439
          10.1101/pdb.prot5439
          20516177
          b7a9147f-8ee4-4dc0-85fd-0d013200584d
          History

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