| Literature DB >> 31178696 |
Matthew Wilcox1,2,3, Tom J Quick1,2,3, James B Phillips2,3.
Abstract
Peripheral Nerve Injury (PNI) is common following blunt or penetrating trauma with an estimated prevalence of 2% among the trauma population. The resulting economic and societal impacts are significant. Nerve regeneration is a key biological process in those recovering from neural trauma. Real Time-quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-qPCR) and RNA sequencing (RNA seq) are investigative methods that are often deployed by researchers to characterize the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underpin this process. However, the ethical and practical challenges associated with studying human nerve injury have meant that studies of nerve injury have largely been limited to rodent models of renervation. In some circumstances it is possible to liberate human nerve tissue for study, for example during reconstructive nerve repair. This complex surgical environment affords numerous challenges for optimizing the yield of RNA in sufficient quantity and quality for downstream RT-qPCR and/or RNA seq applications. This study characterized the effect of: (1) Time delays between surgical liberation and cryopreservation and (2) contact with antiseptic surgical reagents, on the quantity and quality of RNA isolated from human and rodent nerve samples. It was found that time delays of greater than 3 min between surgical liberation and cryopreservation of human nerve samples significantly decreased RNA concentrations to be sub-optimal for downstream RT-qPCR/RNA seq applications (<5 ng/μl). Minimizing the exposure of human nerve samples to antiseptic surgical reagents significantly increased yield of RNA isolated from samples. The detrimental effect of antiseptic reagents on RNA yield was further confirmed in a rodent model where RNA yield was 8.3-fold lower compared to non-exposed samples. In summary, this study has shown that changes to the surgical tissue collection protocol can have significant effects on the yield of RNA isolated from nerve samples. This will enable the optimisation of protocols in future studies, facilitating characterisation of the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underpin the regenerative capacity of the human peripheral nervous system.Entities:
Keywords: RNA isolation and purification; RNA seq; RT-qPCR; cellular and molecular biology; human tissue; peripheral nerve regeneration/repair; surgery; surgical antisepsis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31178696 PMCID: PMC6538796 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2019.00189
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Demographic of patients and samples included in this study.
| Mechanism of injury | Intra-operative findings | Details of surgery | Nerve assessed | Denervated/ Innervated | Approximate time delay between surgical liberation and cryopreservation (min) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Motorbike accident | Axonotmesis of the tibial nerve | Below the knee amputation | Tibial | Denervated | 3 |
| Motorbike accident | Right C5/6 Avulsion | Oberlin’s nerve transfer | Biceps branch of musculocutaneous | Denervated | 3 |
| Fall on to sharp cast iron railing | Axonotmesis of superficial peroneal nerve | Excision of nerve | Superficial common peroneal nerve | Denervated | 3 |
| Motorbike accident | Left C6-T1 root avulsion | Somsak’s nerve transfer | Medial head of triceps branch of the radial nerve | Denervated | 3 |
| Iatrogenic nerve injury secondary to humeral fracture repair | Neurotmesis of the axillary nerve | Somsak’s nerve transfer | Axillary | Denervated | 5 |
| Car v Tree | Right C4 - T1 avulsion | Intercostal nerve transfer to musculocutaneous nerve | Biceps branch of musculocutaneous | Denervated | 10 |
| Motorbike accident | Right C5/6 Avulsion | Oberlin’s nerve transfer | Biceps branch of musculocutaneous | Denervated | 15 |
| Car v Lorry | Axonotmesis of the accessory nerve | Fascicle of C7 transfer to accessory nerve | Fascicle of C7 to pectoralis muscles to accessory nerve | Denervated | 15 |
| Motorbike accident | C5/6/7 Avulsion | Double Oberlin’s nerve transfer | Biceps branch of musculocutaneous | Denervated | 20 |
| Iatrogenic nerve injury secondary to left neck lymph node biopsy | Neurotmesis of the spinal accessory nerve | Supraclavicular nerve transfer to spinal accessory | Supraclavicular and Spinal accessory | Supraclavicular (innervated) and Spinal accessory (denervated) | 3 |
| Trampoline accident | Neurotmesis of the ulnar nerve | Sural nerve autograft to ulnar | Ulnar and Sural | Ulnar (denervated), Sural (innervated) | 3 |
| Moped v Lampost | C5-8 Avulsion | Intercostal nerve transfer to triceps division of radial nerve | Radial and Intercostal | Intercostal (innervated), Radial (denervated) | 3 |
FIGURE 1The effect of time between tissue liberation and cryopreservation on RNA yield in human nerve tissue in a surgical environment utilizing standard antiseptic protocols. The duration between nerve tissue removal and freezing was monitored and samples were grouped according to whether the delay was more than (n = 5) or less than 3 min (n = 4). There was a statistically significant difference between each group (p < 0 01 two tailed t-test). The dotted black line represents the minimum concentration of RNA often cited (Bastard et al., 2002; Fleige and Pfaffl, 2006; Wilkes et al., 2010; Fox et al., 2012; França et al., 2012) required for downstream RT-qPCR/RNA seq Data is presented as a mean ± 1 Standard Deviation (SD).
FIGURE 2The effect of time delays and surgical antiseptic reagents on the quality of RNA isolated from human nerve tissue. (A) A scatter plot to demonstrate the distribution of 260/280 ratios yielded from RNA isolated from denervated human nerve samples surgically liberated and cryopreserved within 3 min (experimental Group 1) compared to those that were not cryopreserved within this timeframe (experimental Group 2). The two dotted black lines represent the range of 260/280 ratios that is predictive of high quality RNA (1.8–2.2). (B) Electropherograms (left) and agarose gels (right) digitally produced by the ExperonTMAutomated Electrophoresis System to assess quality of RNA isolated from denervated human nerve samples. The electropherogram is displayed with fluorescence on the y-axis and time of the fragment on the x-axis. The upper electropherogram/agrose gel represents a denervated sample cryopreserved within 3 min (Group 1) and the lower electropherogram/agrose gel represents a denervated sample that was exposed to a time delay of 20 min (Group 2). (C) A scatter plot to represent the 260/280 ratios yielded from healthy and denervate samples liberated under a “clean change” surgical protocol (Group 3). (D) Electropherogram (left) and agarose gels (right) to assess the quality of RNA isolated from healthy and denervated samples liberated under a “clean change” surgical protocol. The upper electropherogram/agarose gel represents a denervated sample (Group 3) and the lower electropherogram/agarose gel represents sural nerve (Group 3). All samples that yielded 260/280 ratios of between 1.8 and 2.2 were assessed to have Ribosomal Integrity Numbers (RIN) of between 7 and 10 (predictive of high quality RNA).
FIGURE 3Even when the time delay is minimized/equivalent between samples there is still a large differential In RNA yield due to exposure to surgical antiseptics. Denervated samples were liberated under a standard (n = 4) and “clean change” (n = 3) surgical protocol. Samples liberated in a surgical environment where the “clean change” surgical protocol was implemented yielded RNA concentrations significantly higher than those liberated under standard conditions (p < 0.01, two tailed t-test). Healthy nerve samples were also liberated under a “clean change” protocol (n = 3) which yielded significantly lower concentrations of RNA compared to denervated samples < p < 0.001 two tailed t-test). The dotted black line represents the minimum concentration of RNA often required for downstream RT-qPCR/RNA seq. Data are means ± 1 SD.
FIGURE 4RNA yield from rodent nerves is reduced following exposure to surgical antiseptic reagents There was a statistically significant difference between the untreated (n = 8) and each of the treated groups (2% Chlorhexidine gluconate (n = 6), 10% lodine/EtOH (n = 6). 10% lodine/H2O < n = 6) as assessed by a one way ANOVA and Dunnett’s test (p < 0.0l between each treatment group and the untreated group). Data are means ± 1 SD. The black dotted line at 5 ng/ul represents the minimum concentration of RNA required for downstream RT-qPCR and RNA seq applications.