| Literature DB >> 26290800 |
Alyssa D Ammazzalorso1, Christine P Zolnik1,2, Thomas J Daniels2, Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis1.
Abstract
Background. Blacklegged ticks (Ixodes scapularis) are important disease vectors in the United States, known to transmit a variety of pathogens to humans, including bacteria, protozoa, and viruses. Their importance as a disease vector necessitates reliable and comparable methods for extracting microbial DNA from ticks. Furthermore, to explore the population genetics or genomics of this tick, appropriate DNA extraction techniques are needed for both the vector and its microbes. Although a few studies have investigated different methods of DNA isolation from ticks, they are limited in the number and types of DNA extraction and lack species-specific quantification of DNA yield. Methods. Here we determined the most efficient and consistent method of DNA extraction from two different developmental stages of I. scapularis-nymph and adult-that are the most important for disease transmission. We used various methods of physical disruption of the hard, chitinous exoskeleton, as well as commercial and non-commercial DNA isolation kits. To gauge the effectiveness of these methods, we quantified the DNA yield and confirmed the DNA quality via PCR of both tick and microbial genetic material. Results. DNA extraction using the Thermo GeneJET Genomic DNA Purification Kit resulted in the highest DNA yields and the most consistent PCR amplification when combined with either cutting or bead beating with select matrices across life stages. DNA isolation methods using ammonium hydroxide as well as the MoBio PowerSoil kit also produced strong and successful PCR amplification, but only for females. Discussion. We contrasted a variety of readily available methods of DNA extraction from single individual blacklegged ticks and presented the results through a quantitative and qualitative assessment.Entities:
Keywords: Arthropod; Blacklegged tick; DNA extraction; DNA quantification; Nucleic acids; Tick; Vector-borne
Year: 2015 PMID: 26290800 PMCID: PMC4540005 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1147
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Methods of DNA isolation and physical disruption of tick samples.
Only samples treated with the MoBio kit were processed on the GeneMate vortex mixer (BioExpress), while all remaining bead beating took place on the BeadBlaster 24 (Benchmark Scientific).
| DNA extraction method | Alterations to manufacturer protocols | Physical disruption | Bead beating —speed and duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overnight incubation at 56 °C in lysis buffer/proteinase K | Bisection (Nymphs), Quadrisection (Females) | N/A | |
| Elution in 100 μl dsH20 with 5 min room temperature incubation | MP Bio Lysing Matrices | 4 m/s | |
| Overnight incubation at 56 °C in lysis buffer/proteinase K | Bisection (Nymphs), Quadrisection (Females) | N/A | |
| Elution in 100 μl dsH20 with 5 min room temperature incubation | MP Bio Lysing Matrices | 4 m/s | |
| Elution in 100 μl dsH20 with 5 min room temperature incubation | Bisection (Nymphs), Quadrisection (Females) followed by beating with Zymo beads | 4 m/s | |
| Zymo beads | 4 m/s | ||
| Elution in 100 μl of dsH20 with 5 min room temperature incubation | Bisection (Nymphs), Quadrisection (Females) followed by vortexing with MoBio garnet beads | 3,200 rpm | |
| MoBio provided beads | 3,200 rpm | ||
| Initial volume of 150 μl NH4OH Final volume of 70–100 μl dsH20 | Bisection (Nymphs), Quadrisection (Females) | N/A | |
| Second centrifugation for 2 min at 10,000 × | MP Bio Lysing Matrices | 4 m/s |
Bead matrices and their attributes.
The composition, characteristics, and recommended uses for the different bead matrices tested are adapted from the manufacturers’ websites. (MP Bio: http://www.mpbio.com/index.php?cPath=2_77_425&country=223, MoBio: http://www.mobio.com/soil-dna-isolation/powersoil-dna-isolation-kit.html, Zymo: http://www.zymoresearch.com/dna/genomic-dna/solid-ffpe-tissue-dna/zr-tissue-insect-dna-miniprep).
| Matrix | Manufacturer | Material | Suggested use |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| MP Bio | 1.6 mm silicon carbide particles | Samples with tough, hard, or brittle cell membranes |
|
| MP Bio | 2 mm glass beads & 2 mm zirconium oxide beads | Tough, hard cells and organisms within dense exterior matrices, e.g., whole insects and ticks |
|
| MP Bio | 2 mm zirconium beads & one 4 mm ceramic sphere | Very tough, hard samples including chitin exoskeletons, e.g., whole insects and ticks |
|
| MP Bio | Two 6.35 mm zirconium oxide-coated ceramic grinding spheres | Tough tissues, seeds, spores |
|
| MP Bio | 3.175 mm stainless steel beads | Tough tissues, seeds, spores |
|
| MP Bio | 2.0 mm yttria-stabilized zirconium oxide spheres | Tough plant and animal samples |
|
| MoBio | Garnet | Environmental samples |
|
| Zymo | Ceramic | Ticks, mosquitoes, bees, lice, and |
Figure 1DNA concentrations (ng/µl) resulting from the five DNA extraction methods following nymph bisection and female quadrisection as determined using the Qubit HS dsDNA Assay.
Each sample set consisted of three individual tick DNA extractions. Note the difference in scale between the life stages. (A) Nymphs (B) Adult Females.
Average DNA concentration (ng/μl) of whole and cut nymphal and adult female blacklegged ticks.
Average and standard deviation of the DNA concentration values determined using the Qubit HS dsDNA Assay. Unless otherwise indicated, samples were stored in 70% v/v ethanol. Three single-tick measurements were included in each treatment. All values listed as <0.0005 ng/μl indicate a reading of “too low” from the Qubit fluorometer.
| Method | Life stage | Nymphs | Adult females | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bisected | Whole | Quadrisected | Whole | ||
| QIAGEN | Average | 1.70 |
| 9.41 |
|
| SD | 0.640 | 1.63 | |||
| Thermo | Average | 1.68 |
| 9.77 |
|
| SD | 0.11 | 2.35 | |||
| MoBio | Average | 0.070 | 0.0373 | 4.51 | 0.119 |
| SD | 0.0585 | 0.0457 | 0.492 | 0.0133 | |
| Zymo | Average | <0.0005 | <0.0005 | 3.14 | 0.0146 |
| SD | 0.00 | 0.00 | 1.44 | 0.00341 | |
| NH4OH | Average | 0.677 |
| 0.0240 |
|
| SD | 0.086 | 0.0143 | |||
Figure 2DNA concentrations (ng/µl) resulting from the Thermo DNA extraction method following the bead beating of whole ticks.
Bead beating was carried out with each of the MP Bio lysing matrices (G, H, I, M, S, and Z). Nymphs were bisected and adult females were quadrisected. The DNA concentration was determined using the Qubit HS dsDNA Assay. Six nymphs and six adults were used in each bead beating treatment, while three nymphs and three adults were used in each cutting treatment. (A) Nymphs (B) Adult Females.