| Literature DB >> 31490972 |
Sandra Kim Tiam1, Katia Comte1, Caroline Dalle2, Charlotte Duval1, Claire Pancrace2, Muriel Gugger2, Benjamin Marie1, Claude Yéprémian1, Cécile Bernard1.
Abstract
Efficient RNA extraction methods are needed to study transcript regulation. Such methods must lyse the cell without degrading the genetic material. For cyanobacteria this can be particularly challenging because of the presence of the cyanobacteria cell envelope. The great breath of cyanobacterial shape and size (unicellular, colonial, or filamentous multicellular) created a variety of cell lysis methods. However, there is still a lack of reliable techniques for nucleic acid extraction for several types of cyanobacteria. Here we designed and tested 15 extraction methods using physical, thermic or chemical stress on the filamentous cyanobacteria Planktothrix agardhii. Techniques based on the use of beads, sonication, and heat shock appeared to be too soft to break the Planktothrix agardhii cell envelope, whereas techniques based on the use of detergents degraded the cell envelope but also the RNA. Two protocols allowed to successfully obtain good-quality RNA. The first protocol consisted to manually crush the frozen cell pellet with a pestle and the second was based on the use of high-intensity ultra-sonication. When comparing these two, the high-intensity ultra-sonication protocol was less laborious, faster and allowed to extract 3.5 times more RNA compared to the liquid nitrogen pestle protocol. The high-intensity ultra-sonication protocol was then tested on five Planktothrix strains, this protocol allowed to obtain >8.5 μg of RNA for approximatively 3.5 × 108 cells. The extracted RNA were characterized by 260/280 and 260/230 ratio > to 2, indicating that the samples were devoid of contaminant, and RNA Quality Number > to 7, meaning that the integrity of RNA was preserved with this extraction method. In conclusion, the method we developed based on high-intensity ultra-sonication proved its efficacy in the extraction of Planktothrix RNA and could be helpful for other types of samples.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31490972 PMCID: PMC6730872 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0222029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Main existing extraction protocols for cyanobacteria nucleic acid.
Biological model, homogenization method, and extraction solution used in these studies are documented.
| Reference | Biological model | RNA/DNA | Homogenization method | Extraction solution | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical | Thermic | Enzymatic | ||||
| RNA | Trizol (cells powder transfered into) | |||||
| RNA | XSD (xanthogenate-SDS-phenol) | |||||
| RNA | Trizol (cells powder transfered into) | |||||
| RNA | Trizol (cells powder transfered into) | |||||
| RNA | deionized water and saturated phenol | |||||
| RNA | PGTX (phenol, glycerol, guanidine and triton X) | |||||
| Trizol | ||||||
| Trizol | ||||||
| PGTX | ||||||
| Trizol | ||||||
| deionized water and saturated phenol | ||||||
| RNA | Trizol | |||||
| RNA | commercial lysis buffer (PMR1, Mo Bio) | |||||
| DNA | not specified | |||||
| RNA | Trizol | |||||
| RNA | Trizol | |||||
| surface water collected from freshwater reservoir | RNA | Trizol (cells transfered after enzymatic digestion) | ||||
| RNA | Trizol | |||||
Fig 1Protocols designed in this study in order to extract Planktothrix agardhii RNA.
These protocols numbered from (1) to (15) differed in terms of the extraction solution used and the homogenization method applied. P: physical stress; T: thermic stress, and C: chemical stress.
Primer pairs tested for the three Planktothrix agardhii PCC 7805 genes in qPCR realized with the RNA obtained from the RNA extraction protocol developed in this study.
| Gene name | Gene abbreviation | Primer names | Primers sequence (5'-3') | Amplicon size (bp) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DNA gyrase subunit B | gyrB_S | 198 | ||
| gyrB_AS | ||||
| 30S ribosomal protein S12 | rpsL_S | 215 | ||
| rpsL_AS | ||||
| DNA-directed RNA polymerase subunit gamma | rpoC_S | 198 | ||
| rpoC_AS |
a Forward primer;
b Reverse primer.
Mean RNA concentration (± standard deviation; n = 2) for the different homogenization methods tested for Planktothrix agardhii PCC 7805.
RNA integrity (non degraded/degraded) is indicated. *for 50 mL of culture at an OD750nm = 0.3 recovered in 50 μL RNAse/DNAse free sterile water; n.a.: non-available. Detection limit (d.l.) was 1.6ng/μL.
| Homogenization method | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| <d.l. | n.a. | ||
| <d.l. | n.a. | ||
| <d.l. | n.a. | ||
| <d.l. | n.a. | ||
| <d.l. | n.a. | ||
| <d.l. | n.a. | ||
| <d.l. | n.a. | ||
| <d.l. | n.a. | ||
| <d.l. | n.a. | ||
| 37.7 ± 7.6 | degraded | ||
| 39.5 ± 23.1 | degraded | ||
| 83.8 ± 1.3 | degraded | ||
| 75.9 ± 9.8 | degraded |
Fig 2Microscopic observations (n = 2) of P. agardhii after “Beads,” “Sonication,” “Vortex 65,” and “HI ultra-sonication” RNA extraction protocols realized in Trizol or Lysis buffer ML.
Fig 3Optimized RNA extraction procedure for P. agardhii.
RNA quantification (Nanodrop), integrity (electrophoresis), and purity (Nanodrop) obtained with the extraction method given for 50 mL of culture at an OD750nm = 0.3 recovered in 25 μL RNAse/DNAse free sterile water.
RNA quantification, purity and integrity for the optimized homogenization method based on HI ultra-sonication presented in Fig 3 tested on different Planktothrix stains (n = 63 for each strain).
RQN: RNA Quality Number.
| Strain | RNA quantification | RNA purity | RNA integrity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 260/280 ratio | 260/230 ratio | RQN | ||
| 357.2 ± 16.5 | 2.17 ± 0.01 | 2.30 ± 0.06 | 8.01 ± 0.13 | |
| 382.8 ± 17.9 | 2.17 ± 0.01 | 2.34 ± 0.05 | 7.65 ± 0.07 | |
| 323.6 ± 12.7 | 2.18 ± 0.01 | 2.34 ± 0.05 | 8.73 ± 0.09 | |
| 305.6 ± 12.1 | 2.17 ± 0.01 | 2.29 ± 0.08 | 8.83 ± 0.06 | |
| 344.1 ± 13.2 | 2.15 ± 0.01 | 2.30 ± 0.05 | 9.24 ± 0.05 | |
*for 50 mL of culture at an OD750nm = 0.3 recovered in 25 μL RNAse/DNAse free sterile water.
qPCR related parameters for three genes of Planktothrix agardhii PCC 7805 studied.
The Ct values for the first dilution (d1) of the standard curve are given.
| Organism | Gene | Amplicon Tm (°C) | Ct (d1) | Efficiency (%) | Slope | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 81.18 | 22.45 | 0.998 | 104.5 | -3.218 | ||
| 84.50 | 20.00 | 0.998 | 82.9 | -3.812 | ||
| 79.08 | 21.45 | 0.966 | 104.3 | -3.224 |