Long-term whole blood DNA preservation by cost-efficient cryosilicification

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Abstract

Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) is the blueprint of life, and cost-effective methods for its long-term storage could have many potential benefits to society. Here we present the method of in situ cryosilicification of whole blood cells, which allows long-term preservation of DNA. Importantly, our straightforward approach is inexpensive, reliable, and yields cryosilicified samples that fulfill the essential criteria for safe, long-term DNA preservation, namely robustness against external stressors, such as radical oxygen species or ultraviolet radiation, and long-term stability in humid conditions at elevated temperatures. Our approach could enable the room temperature storage of genomic information in book-size format for more than one thousand years (thermally equivalent), costing only 0.5 $/person. Additionally, our demonstration of 3D-printed DNA banking artefacts, could potentially allow ‘artificial fossilization’.

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Zhou, L., Lei, Q., Guo, J., Gao, Y., Shi, J., Yu, H., … Zhu, W. (2022). Long-term whole blood DNA preservation by cost-efficient cryosilicification. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-33759-y

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