|
The World's Best DNase
Improved TURBO DNA-free
•Removes trace
quantities of DNA that plague RT-PCR
•DNase enhancer increases the potency of TURBO DNase by
2-3 orders of magnitude
•Remove DNase from RNA solutions in 5 minutes without phenol,
alcohol, or heating
•TURBO DNase is RNase-free and recombinant in origin
The Best Way to Remove Contaminating DNA
Ambion recently introduced the highly
potent TURBO DNase (patent pending) in the TURBO DNA-free Kit.
TURBO DNase is a recombinant, engineered form of DNase I that
is much more efficient than wild type DNase I in digesting
trace amounts of unwanted DNA. TURBO DNase binds DNA substrates
6-fold more tightly than traditional DNase I, making this enzyme
the tool of choice for clearing residual DNA that can generate
a confounding signal in RT-PCR applications.
Enhanced DNase Activity
Ambion's continuing commitment to developing
the best possible DNA removal technology has resulted in an
enhancer that increases the effectiveness of TURBO DNase by
two orders of magnitude. This enhancer is part of the TURBO
DNase Buffer provided in both the improved version of the TURBO
DNA-free Kit and the TURBO DNase enzyme, available separately.
TURBO DNase is highly effective in eliminating DNA from most
samples, including samples that are heavily contaminated with
DNA. This is important for scientists who use RT-PCR to analyze
the RNA. Since the TURBO DNase in the TURBO DNA-free Kit
is already extremely potent, Ambion created an RNA preparation
that was largely comprised of genomic DNA (gDNA) to quantify
the level of improvement offered by the new DNase enhancer.
Consequently, we prepared a mouse spleen total RNA sample that
contained 70% DNA and only 30% RNA. This DNA-laden RNA was
then treated with either the original TURBO DNA-free Kit
or with the improved version. To better evaluate the differences
in DNA removal between the two kits, we modified the standard
protocol by using 4 times less TURBO DNase than is normally
used. This was necessary to produce a detectable, residual
DNA signal in real-time PCR by both kit formulations, so that
their differences in fold DNA removal could be accurately calculated.
Using these conditions, the original formulation of TURBO DNA-free reduced
gDNA that could be PCR amplified by 451-fold. The improved
kit reduced the gDNA contamination much further, by 277,000-fold,
or 614 times more than the kit without the enhancer (Figure
1).
 |
| Figure 1. DNA
Removal Improved >600 fold with New TURBO DNA-free. Mouse
spleen total RNA samples, highly contaminated with DNA
(30% RNA and 70% DNA; 23 µg), were treated with
4 U of TURBO DNase in a 60 µl reaction for 20 min
at 37°C, or were left untreated. DNase digestion
was halted by adding 6 µl (1/10 volume) of DNase
Inactivation Reagent. Each treated sample (2 µl)
was amplified in a 25 µl RT-PCR using a TaqMan® primer:probe
set for mouse GAPDH. RT-PCR analysis of the DNase treated
samples unmasked the RNA-only signal, which appeared
at 15.3 Ct. |
Additional studies have corroborated
the superior efficiency of the improved kit in eliminating
DNA from different sources of RNA using a variety of primer:probe
sets in RT-PCR (data not shown). As a result, the TURBO DNA-free Kit,
already the best choice for eradicating DNA from RNA preparations,
is now even more effective in digesting DNA away from the most
contaminated samples.
Destroy DNA and Preserve RNA Quality
Many current DNase inactivation protocols
rely on either phenol/chloroform extraction to remove the DNase
enzyme, or on a denaturing thermal inactivation step. Both
procedures are undesirable. Organic extractions are tedious
and prone to RNA loss during extraction and precipitation,
while heating the DNase to destroy the enzyme also heats the
RNA-- in the presence of divalent cations, this induces RNA
strand scission. TURBO DNA-free, however, provides a
fast and easy solution to the problem of DNase inactivation:
a user-friendly resin that binds the TURBO DNase and physically
separates it from the RNA in the digestion reaction. Simply
add the resin to the DNase-treated sample, incubate for 2 minutes,
pellet the resin, and recover the supernatant. Importantly,
the DNase inactivation resin also binds and removes divalent
cations, such as Mg2+, that can induce RNA hydrolysis
when the sample is heated. This is particularly important for
researchers who need to heat denature RNA samples prior to
RT-PCR.
Maximum RT-PCR Sensitivity
The extraordinary linear dynamic range
of RT-PCR makes it effective for quantitation of both abundant
and rare mRNA targets. Analysis of rare targets requires a
sensitivity that often must stretch beyond 30 amplification
cycles.
At high cycle numbers, RT-PCR is significantly less robust than it is in earlier
cycles; suboptimal salt or pH conditions, or contaminants that have little
impact on accurate detection at 15-25 cycles can profoundly distort detection
and quantitation at >30 cycles. For this reason, the improved TURBO DNA-free Kit
was carefully tested at the lower threshold for target detection to ensure
maximum RT-PCR responsiveness. As shown in Figure 2, transcript levels from
as little as 1 pg of total RNA could be quantitated in one-step qRT-PCR within
a single Ct of the untreated control reaction. Thus, TURBO DNA-free offers
researchers the confidence that rapid, simple, and highly effective DNA and
DNase removal does not compromise sensitivity.
|
|
| Figure 2. Treatment of RNA with
TURBO DNA-free™ Maintains
Target Sensitivity in Real-time PCR. (A)
Purified HeLa total RNA (100 pg and 1 pg) was treated with
the improved TURBO DNA-free according to the standard protocol.
5 µl of
the treated sample was reverse transcribed with Ambion’s
MessageSensor™ RT Kit and then amplified with a human
b-actin TaqMan® primer/probe set in one-step RT-PCR.
(B) The same analysis described above was performed, except
that PCR amplification was monitored with a human CDC-2 TaqMan
primer/probe set. |
back
to top
|