Precipitating nucleic acids using either isopropanol or ethanol is a very common operation, and I've read some very different protocols on the duration and temperature the precipitation should be performed.
I've seen anything from precipitating at room-temperature and centrifugating immediately without any delay to precipitating at -20 °C over night in various protocols.
Is there any published data about the influence of duration and temperature on the yield of the nucleic acid precipitation?
Answer
I always did mine at -80 C, but I never compared the results to other protocols (I don't fix what's not broken). But, I was curious about the same thing, so I looked around. I found one paper discussing this: Paithankar and Prasad, Nuc Acids Res 19(6):1346 (1991)
It shows that at low concentrations, EtOH at RT actually outperforms the precipitations at both 4 C and dry ice/ethanol bath. That difference is quite big at 100ng/ml DNA and lost when there is more than 10 ug/ml DNA. For typical extractions, based on this data, I'd do it at RT.
On the other hand, Hilario and Mackay say in their book that:
for genomic DNA isolation, different DNA precipitation temperatures and incubation times have little effect on recovery rates. One can directly centrifuge after adding ethanol without the -20 C incubation, and, it -20 C ethanol is not available, room temperature ethanol can be used.
They do not, however, provide any citation for that statement.
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