| Literature DB >> 9449556 |
Abstract
To isolate DNA for nucleoside analog incorporation studies, many investigators use RNase A to remove RNA from total cellular nucleic acid. We observed persistence of ribonucleotides from RNA in nucleic acid samples treated with RNase A alone. Although incubation of [5-3H]uridine-labeled nucleic acid with 50 microg/ml RNase A decreased tritium by 97%, HPLC analysis of the resulting DNA preparation digested to nucleosides revealed high levels of ribonucleosides. Increasing RNase A 10-fold (500 microg/ml) effected only a 1.7-fold reduction in ribonucleosides. Overall, the level of ribonucleosides was one-fourth that of the deoxynucleosides, primarily due to the high levels of guanosine. It was hypothesized that the ribonucleosides originated from guanosine-rich tracts of RNA since RNase A cuts preferentially 3' to pyrimidine monophosphates and to some extent after AMP. The addition of 0.05 microg/ml RNase T1, which preferentially cleaves RNA 3' to GMP, decreased total ribonucleosides by nearly 20-fold. In conclusion, we have developed a rapid method which removes greater then 99% of cellular RNA from nucleic acid extracts and a reversed-phase HPLC procedure that detects RNA contamination more sensitively than [5-3H]uridine labeling. These methods are useful for the determination of analog incorporation into DNA, especially for agents which incorporate into both DNA and RNA.Entities:
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Year: 1997 PMID: 9449556 DOI: 10.1016/s0378-4347(97)00379-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Chromatogr B Biomed Sci Appl ISSN: 1387-2273