Biologie - DNase activity
DNA integrity determines success or failure in genetic testing, forensics, and gene therapy - trace DNase contamination degrades samples creating false-negative results, compromises evidence, or destroys therapeutic constructs. DNase activity assessment protects DNA integrity in diagnostic, therapeutic, and research applications by detecting nuclease contamination that standard protein tests might miss through persistence of enzymatic activity after incomplete inactivation. The fluorescent DNA substrate degradation assay provides sensitive detection of enzymatic activity that survives processing intended to inactivate enzymes, revealing contamination risks for genetic testing devices, gene therapy delivery systems, and forensic sample collection tools. For manufacturers serving genomics, personalized medicine, and biotechnology markets, DNase-free validation differentiates products in quality-conscious segments where sample integrity determines diagnostic accuracy or therapeutic efficacy. The test validates that manufacturing processes including metal passivation treatments and plastic molding effectively eliminate nuclease activity without relying solely on protein removal that might miss active enzymes. Critical applications include sample collection devices for genetic testing where DNase degradation causes test failures, storage tubes for forensic samples where DNA degradation compromises evidence, and delivery systems for gene therapy where nuclease activity destroys therapeutic DNA before reaching target cells. Manufacturing validation confirms that cleaning procedures remove nucleases from equipment, raw materials don't introduce DNase contamination, and finished products maintain DNA integrity throughout intended use. The enzymatic activity measurement provides more relevant information than total protein testing for DNA-sensitive applications, as even denatured proteins can retain sufficient activity to degrade DNA samples.