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Cell Disruption: Getting
the RNA Out
Complete Disruption - A Critical Step
Cellular disruption is the first step in
RNA isolation and one of the most critical steps affecting yield
and quality of the isolated RNA. Typically, cell disruption needs
to be fast and thorough. Slow disruption, for example placing
cells or tissue in guanidinium isothiocyanate (GITC) lysis solution
without any additional physical shearing, may result in RNA degradation
by endogenous RNases released internally, yet still inaccessible
to the protein denaturant, GITC. This is especially a concern
when working with tissues high in endogenous RNase such as spleen
and pancreas. Incomplete disruption may also result in decreased
yield because some of the RNA in the sample remains trapped in
intact cells and, therefore, is unavailable for subsequent purification.
For most samples, thorough disruption can be monitored by close
inspection of the lysate after disruption. There should be no
visible particulates, except when disrupting materials containing
hard, non-cellular components, such as connective tissue or bone.
Finding the most appropriate method of cell or tissue disruption
for your specific starting material is important for maximizing
the yield and quality of your RNA preparation. The following
article describes various disruption methods, and suggests which
method to use for specific tissues/cell types. All of the disruption
methods described here are compatible with Ambion's RNA isolation
kits.
Mechanical Or Enzymatic Disruption?
Mechanical
Cell and tissue disruption methods are
usually mechanical or enzymatic. Mechanical methods for disrupting
fresh tissue and cells include homogenization with a Dounce or
with a mechanical homogenizer (such as the Brinkmann Polytron),
vortexing, sonication, French press, bead milling, and even grinding
in a coffee grinder! Disrupting frozen tissue is more time consuming
and cumbersome than processing fresh tissue, but freezing tissue
samples is sometimes necessary. Samples are usually frozen when,
1) they are collected over a period of time and thus, cannot
be processed simultaneously; 2) there are many samples, 3) samples
are collected in the field, or 4) mechanical processing of fresh
samples is insufficient for thorough disruption. A mortar and
pestle or bag and hammer are typically used when the starting
material is frozen. Ambion's novel RNAlater® Tissue Storage:RNA
Stabilization Solution provides an alternative to freezing samples
by stabilizing the RNA within a tissue sample until disruption
is performed. RNA will remain intact in tissues for a day at
37°C, a week at 25°C, a month at 4°C, and indefinitely
at subzero temperatures.
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Figure 1. Representative
samples of total RNA isolated using the Ambion ToTALLY RNA™ Isolation
Kit. Total RNA was isolated
from each sample as per protocol. Approximately 2 µg of each
was electrophoresed on a 1% denaturing agarose gel and stained
with ethidium bromide. Note that smaller rRNA bands visible
in the leaf sample are derived from plant organelles such
as plastids and chloroplasts. |
Enzymatic
Lysozyme, zymolase and lysostaphin digestion
are among the enzymatic methods frequently used with bacteria
and yeast to dissolve a coat, capsule, capsid or other structure
not easily sheared by mechanical methods alone. Enzymatic treatment is usually followed by sonication,
homogenization or vigorous vortexing in a GITC lysis buffer.
Enzymatic methods may also be used for specific eukaryotic tissues,
e.g., collagenase to break down collagen prior to cell lysis.
For a quick review of disruption options, please see the chart
below.
Animal Tissues And Cells
Most animal tissues can be processed fresh
(unfrozen). It is important to keep fresh tissue cold and to
process it quickly (within 30 minutes) after dissection. Tissues
stored in Ambion's RNAlater can be treated as though they
are fresh and processed identically. When disrupting fresh tissue,
the cells need to be sheared immediately at the time the GITC
lysis solution is added. This can be done by dispensing the lysis
solution in the Dounce or tube, adding the tissue and immediately
sonicating or homogenizing. Samples should never be left sitting
in lysis solution, undisrupted. Hard tissues such as bone, teeth
and some hard tumors may require milling. SPEX CertiPrep, Inc.
of Metuchen, NJ manufactures freezer mills that
pulverize samples by shuttling an impactor back and forth magnetically
at cryogenic temperatures. Some Ambion customers have reported
successful sample disruption using such mills. Mills may also
be useful for other hard materials - Ambion's Technical Services
Department has even had requests for protocols to isolate RNA
from rock!
Animal tissues that have been frozen after collection are disrupted by
grinding in liquid nitrogen with a mortar and pestle. During this process,
it is important that the equipment and tissue remain at cryogenic temperatures.
The tissue should be dry and powdery after grinding. Grinding should
be followed by thorough homogenization with a Dounce or mechanical homogenizer
in a GITC lysis buffer. Processing frozen tissue in this way is cumbersome
and time consuming, but effective. Alternatively, some samples can be
stored in Ambion's RNAlater Buffer and processed as fresh tissue.
Cultured cells are normally easy to disrupt. Cells grown in suspension
are collected by centrifugation, washed and resuspended in a GITC lysis
solution. Lysis is made complete by immediate vortexing or vigorous pipetting
of the solution. Attached cells can be lysed directly on the culture
plate. GITC lysis solution is added directly to the plate or flask and
cells are scraped into the solution. The lysate is then transferred to
a tube and vortexed or pipetted to ensure complete cellular disruption.
Alternatively, cells can be detached, collected, rinsed with PBS to remove
culture medium, and then lysed by vortexing or sonicating in the lysis
solution. Placement of the flask or plate on ice while washing and lysing
the cells will further protect the RNA from endogenous RNases released
during the disruption process.
Plant Tissues
Soft, fresh plant tissues from plants such
as Nicotiana and Arabidopsis can often be disrupted by homogenization
in lysis buffer alone. (RNA yields from Arabidopsis are typically
low; please see Figure 2 for typical plant RNA profiles.) Other
plant tissues, like pine needles, need to be ground dry, without
liquid nitrogen. Some hard, woody plant materials may require
freezing and grinding in liquid nitrogen or milling. Plant cell
suspension cultures and calluses can be lysed by sonication in
a lysis buffer for 0.5–2 minutes (3). The diversity of plants
and plant tissue make it impossible to give a single recommendation
for all. However, most plant tissues typically contain polysaccharides
and polyphenols that can coprecipitate with RNA and inhibit downstream
assays. Treating a plant tissue lysate with polyvinylpyrrolidone
(PVP) will precipitate such problematic components from the lysate
before the actual RNA isolation is carried out (4). Ambion's
Plant RNA Isolation Aid is a ready-to-use PVP solution with which
plant tissue lysates can be treated.
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Figure 2. Total
RNA Isolation from Various Plant Tissues Using RNAqueous Kit
and Plant RNA Isolation Aid. The
two large ribosomal RNA bands are clearly visible. Note
that the two kits may also be used on a fungus.
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Yeast And Fungi
Yeast can be extremely difficult to disrupt
because their cell walls may form capsules or nearly indestructible
spores. There are several ways to approach yeast cell disruption.
One of the most common and probably the most straightforward
methods is mechanical disruption using a bead mill. Bead mills
vigorously agitate a tube containing the sample, lysis buffer
and small glass beads (0.5–1 mm). Bead mills are available
from Biospec Products, Inc. Bartlesville, OK.
In a few minutes, cells are completely disrupted. Alternatively,
yeast cell walls can be digested with zymolase, glucalase and/or lyticase to produce spheroplasts that are readily lysed
by vortexing in a guanidinium-based lysis buffer. Some specialized isolation methods
for yeast exist which use such methods as boiling SDS or boiling
phenol treatment to insure complete cell lysis.
To disrupt filamentous fungi, scrape the mycelial mat into a cold mortar,
add liquid nitrogen and grind to a fine powder with a pestle. The powder
can then be thoroughly homogenized or sonicated in lysis buffer to solubilize
completely. As fungi may also be rich in polysaccharides, treatment with
PVP may be helpful here too.
Bacteria
Bacteria, like plants, are extremely diverse;
therefore, it is difficult to make one recommendation for all
bacteria. Bead milling will lyse most Gram positive and Gram
negative bacteria, including mycobacteria. It can be performed
by adding glass beads and lysis solution to a bacterial cell
pellet and milling for a few minutes. It is possible to lyse
some Gram negative bacteria by sonication in lysis solution alone.
At Ambion, we have found this to be sufficient for small cultures
(milliliters), but not large cultures (liters). Bacterial cell
walls can be digested with lysozyme to form spheroplasts. Gram
positive bacteria usually require more rigorous digestion (increased
incubation time, increased incubation temperature, etc.) than
Gram negative organisms. The spheroplasts are then easily lysed
with vigorous vortexing or sonication in GITC lysis buffer.
Soil And Sediments
Disruption of cells found in soil and sediments
is accomplished one of two ways. One technique isolates the bacterial
cells from the material prior to the RNA isolation procedure.
This is accomplished by homogenization of wet soil in a Waring
blender followed by a slow speed centrifugation to remove fungal
biomass and soil debris. The supernatant is centrifuged again
at a higher speed to pellet the bacterial cells (5). From this
point, cells can be lysed as described above for bacteria. Other
techniques describe RNA isolation from the soil or sediment directly.
For example, one method requires soil to be added to a bead mill
along with diatomaceous earth and lysis buffer. The sample is
then agitated for a few minutes and centrifuged to remove solid
debris.
Getting the RNA Out
All of the disruption methods described
here are compatible with Ambion's RNA isolation kits. Cellular
disruption in a strong denaturant such as GITC, provided as a
component of Ambion's RNA isolation kits, yields a cell lysate
from which RNA will then be isolated. The cell lysate can be
used immediately or frozen for future use. Contact
Ambion for more information about its RNA isolation products.
References
- Rapley, Ralph, Manning, David L. RNA Isolation and Characterization
Protocols 1998. Humana Press, Inc. Totowa, New Jersey.
- Farrell, Robert E., Jr. RNA Methodologies 1993. Academic Press,
Inc. San Diego, California.
- Liao, Yu-Chai, Drossard, Jurgen, Nahring, Jorg M., Fischer,
Rainer. Isolation of RNA from Plant Cell Suspension cultures
and Calli by Sonication. Biotechniques (1997) 6:996-1000.
- Wilkins, T.A. and Smart, L.B., Isolation of RNA from Plant
Tissue, in A Laboratory Guide to RNA: Isolation, Analysis, and
Synthesis, P.A. Krieg, Ed. (1996) ISBN 0-471-12536-9; Wiley-Liss,
Inc.
- Holben, William E., Jansson, Janet K., Chelim, Barry K., Tiedje,
James M. DNA Probe Method for the Detection of Specific Microorganisms
in the Soil Bacterial Community. Applied and Environmental Microbiology
(1998) 54:3. 703-711.
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