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The Basics: How Phenol Extraction of DNA Works

Posted in: DNA / RNA Manipulation and Analysis
DNA in a glass bottle representing Phenol extraction of DNA

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Phenol extraction of DNA is a commonly used method for removing proteins from nucleic acids, e.g., to remove proteins from cell lysate during genomic DNA preparation. It’s commonly used, but not well understood.

If you want to know how phenol extraction works… read on.

DNA Extraction Using Phenol: The Basic Protocol

I’ll start with a quick outline of how phenol extraction of DNA is performed. First, a volume of phenol is added to the aqueous soup containing the proteins and the DNA to be purified.

Since phenol and water are immiscible (that is, does not form a homogeneous mixture when mixed), two phases form:

  1. a water phase (a.k.a. aqueous phase); and
  2. a phenol phase.

Phenol is the denser of the two liquids so it sits on the bottom.

The phases are then mixed thoroughly. This forces the phenol into the water layer where it forms an emulsion of droplets throughout. The proteins in the water phase are denatured and partition into the phenol, while the DNA stays in the water (Figure 1).

The Basics: How Phenol Extraction of DNA Works
Figure 1. Phenol extraction of DNA.

First, a Bit About Solvents

To explain how the addition of phenol can separate DNA and proteins, we need to briefly touch on solvents. This is the chemistry bit… bear with me.

A solvent is a substance, normally a liquid, that can dissolve other substances. Broadly, solvents can be classified according to their polarity, which depends on how extreme the spread of the electron density in the molecule is.

Water is a very polar solvent because the oxygen atom is very electronegative so it “sucks” the electrons towards it and away from the hydrogens, creating a slight negative charge on the oxygen and a slight positive on the hydrogens (Figure 2). That is, the charge is “polarised” within the molecule.

 Figure 1. The polarity of Phenol Vs Water.
Figure 2. The polarity of Phenol Vs Water.

Phenol is a less polar molecule than water. Although it has a highly electronegative oxygen, this is counteracted by the phenyl ring, which is also very electronegative so there is no concentration of electron density around the oxygen. That is, the charge is not so polarised in a phenol molecule.

DNA is Most soluble in the Aqueous Phase

So what does this have to do with the separation of DNA and protein?

Well in general, polar (charged) compounds dissolve best in polar solvents and non-polar molecules dissolve best in less polar or non-polar solvents.

DNA is a polar molecule due to the negative charges on its phosphate backbone, so it is very soluble in water and less so in phenol. Therefore, when water (+DNA +protein) and phenol are mixed, the DNA does not dissolve in phenol. Instead, it remains in the aqueous phase.

Phenol Flips the Solubility of Proteins

But, proteins are a different story entirely. As you know, proteins consist of long chains of amino acids. Each amino acid has its specific characteristics owing to the nature of their side chains. Some, (e.g., phenylalanine, leucine, and tryptophan) are non-polar, because their side chains contain no charged entities. Conversely, amino acids with side chains containing charged entities (e.g., glutamate, lysine, and histidine) are polar.

The polarity differences in the side chains are biologically important because they largely determine how peptides fold into functional proteins.

The Basics: How Phenol Extraction of DNA Works
Figure 3. Separation of DNA and proteins by phenol.

Put simply, the chains fold so that as many as possible of the side chains that are less polar than the solvent are inside the proteins (away from the solvent). In contrast, side chains of similar polarity to the solvent arrange outside (Figure 3, panel 1).

Another way to think about it is that polar side chains are hydrophilic, and non-polar are hydrophobic. The hydrophobic side chains hide on the inside, with the hydrophilic chains on the outside.

In the cell, cytoplasmic proteins fold according to the influence of water. However, protein folding changes upon exposure to a less polar solvent, like phenol (Figure 3, panel 2).

In short, the proteins flip inside-out, because the less-polar residues (usually hidden inside) now want to interact with the less-polar phenol.

Conversely, some of the very polar residues may flip to the inside of the globular protein to be shielded from the unsuitable new solvent.

In short, the proteins are permanently denatured by the new solvent environment provided by the phenol.

Whereas the polar residues on the outside of the proteins made them soluble in water, the phenol-induced folding changes forced the phenol-favoring residues to outside. The proteins are now more soluble in phenol than in the aqueous phase.

And this is the basis of phenol extraction of DNA. The phenol-soluble proteins partition to the phenol phase while, as discussed above, the water-soluble, polar DNA molecules stay in the water phase (Figure 3, panel 3).

Once you’ve obtained your aqueous DNA, you can use ethanol precipitation to extract it from the aqueous phase.

A Word of Caution

Phenol is a toxic chemical that is poisonous and corrosive. It can rapidly cause severe burns and should be handled with extreme care. (1) Because of the dangers of phenol, consideration of alternative methods should be given. Salting out is one method for DNA extraction that avoids the use of hazardous reagents like phenol. (2,3)

Final Thoughts

This article gives an overview of phenol extraction of DNA. Read our related article for a more in-depth look at the practical aspects of phenol/chloroform extraction, including differences between DNA and RNA extraction, the importance of pH, and why chloroform is used.

References

  1. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. Medical Management Guidelines for Phenol. Accessed 14 October 2021.
  2. Miller SA, Dykes DD, Polesky HF. (1988) A simple salting out procedure for extracting DNA from human nucleated cells. Nucleic Acids Res. 16(3):1215.
  3. Javadi A, Shamaei M, Mohammadi Ziazi L, et al. (2014) Qualification study of two genomic DNA extraction methods in different clinical samples. Tanaffos. 13(4):41-47.

Further reading

  1. Kirby, KS. (1957) A new method for the isolation of deoxyribonucleic acids: evidence on the nature of bonds between deoxyribonucleic acid and protein. Biochem J  66(3) 495–504. 
  2. Pusztai A. (1966) Interactions of proteins with other polyelectrolytes in a two-phase system containing phenol and aqueous buffers at various pH values. Biochem J  99(1):93–101. 
  3. Phenol extraction. Accessed 14 October 2021.

Originally published on February 12, 2008. Updated and revised October 2021.

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Image Credit: John Goode

48 Comments

  1. Shyam on September 8, 2016 at 10:21 am

    hello, it was really helpful but I have a question. Is it that the polar binding between protein molecules and water weaker than that with phenol? what about in cases where most of the amino acids are polar?
    please kindly reply and clear my doubt



    • Rajat on July 10, 2019 at 10:25 am

      In case of a protein molecule having a lot/all polar residues, the protein going to stay in the aqueous phase imo



  2. Melissa Carnish on July 21, 2016 at 5:14 pm

    How could I cite this? Are there publications that reflect this basic information that I could cite? This article was so helpful and I want to cite it but I feel uncomfortable citing this page because I need published literature.



  3. Eliza on April 5, 2016 at 9:00 am

    Hello,
    I have a protocol of using phenol method for fungal DNA extraction from mycelium scraped straight from plate. I am a young woman, breastfeeding, feel like I shall look for alternative method. However I need a high yield results as well. I used DNAeasy by Qiagen and Machery-Nigel PlantII kit, but did’t get as good results. Can You please advice me what can I do? Am I in risk of phenol side effects? Are vapours still harmful for us?



    • Jasmo ranciod on March 16, 2020 at 9:01 pm

      Do all cytoplasmic proteins end up in phenol?
      If yes how?



  4. Lisa on January 25, 2016 at 8:02 am

    Hey,
    one question please, which kind of gloves do you wear during the work with phenol and chloroform? We got Problems to finde gloves which are not or less permeabel to both of this chemicals. I hope you can give me an advice.
    Thanks.



    • Dr Amanda Welch on January 26, 2016 at 11:26 am

      We always used nitrile gloves and took them off immediately if we spilled phenol or chloroform on them. According to EH&S at UPenn, the breakthrough time for a a 4mil nitrile glove is 3 minutes (https://www.ehrs.upenn.edu/programs/labsafety/chp/sop/extraction.html). I know that there are some reusable gloves that can withstand contact to phenol or chloroform, but those were rather expensive for our laboratory.



      • Lisa on January 27, 2016 at 9:20 am

        Thanks a lot, Amanda.



  5. Emma on November 11, 2013 at 4:53 pm

    Hi everyone,

    I have been reading this article with interest. At the moment I use phenol in my DNA extraction method with SDS and sodium phosphate. I am looking at the feasibility of phasing out the phenol for something less toxic and therefore easier to transport. I gather it needs to be something ideally that is less polar than water like phenol, but I’m not sure of what less hazardous chemicals may do the same job.

    Does anyone have any suggestions? Thanks in advance.



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