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DNA-free™ A NEW Method to Remove DNA
Now it's easy to make your RNA free of genomic
DNA contamination and ready for RT-PCR. DNA-free™ DNase Treatment & Removal
Reagents contain RNase-free DNase, and an optimized DNase digestion
buffer, to ensure safe, complete removal of contaminating DNA from
any RNA sample. Also included is a unique DNase Removal Reagent which,
after digestion, eliminates DNase in minutes no more messy
phenol extractions or heat inactivation procedures which can cause
RNA loss or degradation.
DNA, contaminating RNA preparations, can serve
as a template in PCR to produce a false positive signal from RT-PCR.
Although false positives are easily identified by looking at the
outcome of a "minus-RT" control, eliminating the DNA is not trivial.
Here we discuss the problem of genomic DNA contamination in RT-PCR,
the best methods to detect and remove it, and an innovative way to
remove DNase I after DNase I treatment.
All Isolation Methods Result in Contaminating DNA
There is no RNA isolation method that consistently
produces RNA free from genomic DNA without the use of DNase. To illustrate
this, RT-PCR was performed on mouse liver RNA isolated by several
different methods:
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Figure 1. DNA
Contamination in RNA Isolated by 5 Different Methods. Total
RNA was isolated from mouse liver by the methods indicated.
RNA (0.5 µg) underwent RT-PCR, or simply PCR (without reverse
transcription), as indicated and aliquots of each reaction
were electrophoresed on a 2% agarose gel and stained with
ethidium bromide.
| Lane |
RNA Isolation Method
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1
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single-reagent extraction method
[e.g. TRIzol® Reagent (Invitrogen), TRI Reagent® (MRC),
RNAzol® (Tel-Test), RNA Stat-60® (Tel-Test), RNAwiz™ (Ambion)] |
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2
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glass fiber filter-binding
method [e.g. RNeasy® (Qiagen), RNAqueous® (Ambion)] |
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3
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a multi-step guanidinium thiocyanate/acid
phenol : chloroform extraction method (e.g.
the Chomzynski and Sacchi procedure, Ambion's ToTALLY
RNA™ Kit) |
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4
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centrifugation through a CsCl
cushion |
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5
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two rounds of oligo d(T) selection
[e.g. FastTrack® RNA (Invitrogen), Poly(A)Pure™ Kit (Ambion)] |
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6
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water control |
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Figure 1 shows that, regardless of the isolation
method, gene specific product is synthesized in the absence of reverse
transcriptase, indicating that none of these RNA isolation methods
produce DNA-free RNA.
How Do You Know If Your RNA Is Contaminated with DNA?
How can you test for DNA contamination in RNA samples?
The best way is to include a "minus-RT" control for each RNA sample
in an RT-PCR experiment. If a PCR product is generated from an RNA
sample that was not reverse transcribed (minus-RT control), then
the product was amplified from contaminating DNA. Contaminating DNA
may come from either the RNA preparation or from the RT-PCR reagents.
A minus-template control for the PCR distinguishes between these
possibilities.
PCR primers can be designed to control for genomic
DNA contamination. Primers that span intron-exon boundaries amplify
a product from contaminating DNA that includes the intron, making
it much larger than the expected cDNA product. In fact, primers can
be designed to span a genomic fragment large enough to make amplification
from genomic DNA effectively impossible. Relying solely on primer
design for the detection of DNA contamination, however, is not always
enough. Pseudogenes may exist in your sample that can produce an
amplified product of the same size as the expected cDNA product.
(Pseudogenes arise from a processed mRNA that is reverse transcribed
and then integrated into the genome; no introns are present). Figure
2 illustrates how primer design can be used to detect most DNA contamination,
and why a "minus-RT" control remains necessary in any RT-PCR experiment.
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Figure 2. Detection
of DNA Contamination in RNA. Mouse
liver RNA (0.5 µg) was used in RT-PCR. The S15 PCE primers
span an intron-exon junction. Products from both the gene
and the pseudogene for this message are detected in the minus-RT
reaction.
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Getting Rid of Contaminating DNA and the DNase Used
to Destroy it
Because virtually all RNA samples have trace amounts
of contaminating DNA, most protocols specify DNase treatment for
RT-PCR applications. DNase I treatment is clearly the best way to
rid an RNA sample of contaminating DNA. However, some preparations
of DNase may be contaminated with RNases, and the DNase must be completely
inactivated prior to RT-PCR so that it doesn't degrade newly synthesized
DNA. Unfortunately, removal or inactivation of this enzyme is problematic;
DNase removal methods can be inconvenient, ineffective and even detrimental
to RNA integrity.
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With the RNAqueous®-4PCR Kit, you
can isolate RNA free of genomic DNA contamination from
samples as small as 100 cells or 1 mg of tissue. The
kit contains reagents for the phenol-free isolation of
RNA, and reagents to remove contaminating DNA. The kit
also contains plastic pestles designed for disruption
of small tissue samples, using microfuge tubes as mortars.
The RNAqueous procedure involves disrupting tissues or
cells in a guanidinium-based lysis solution, binding
the RNA to a glass fiber filter, washing the filter to
remove contaminants, and recovering the RNA in a small
volume of elution solution. Finally, the RNA is treated
with the DNase treatment and removal reagents included
in the kit yielding RT-PCR ready RNA.
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RT-PCR Experiments
Using Total RNA isolated with the RNAqueous®-4PCR
Kit. RNA was
used as template in reverse transcription (RT)
reactions or in mock RT reactions that did not
contain reverse transcriptase. Ten percent of
the resulting cDNA was amplified by PCR using
S15 primers. No PCR product is seen from the
minus-RT reactions, demonstrating the lack of
DNA contamination in RNA isolated using Ambion's
RNAqueous-4PCR Kit. The lanes to the right of
the markers show the S15 RT-PCR product from
the indicated samples.
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Commonly used methods for removal or inactivation
of DNase after digestion include: heat inactivation, proteinase K
treatment followed by phenol:chloroform extraction, chelation of
essential ions with EDTA, and purification using a glass-filter binding
method such as RNAqueous® (see the sidebar at right, "RNA Isolation
for RT-PCR). Each of these inactivation or removal methods has its
drawbacks.
Heat inactivation: Probably
the most common method of DNase inactivation is heat treatment, typically
for 5 minutes at 75°C. Although this method appears straightforward,
the divalent cations in the DNase digestion buffer can cause (chemically-induced)
strand scission of RNA when heated. Studies at Ambion have shown
that much of an RNA sample is destroyed when heated to 80°C for 5
minutes in the presence of 2.5 mM MgCl2 and 0.1 mM CaCl2 (salts
typically found in DNase I digestion buffer).
Proteinase K treatment and
organic extraction: Proteinase K treatment followed by phenol:chloroform
extraction is probably the most rigorous method for DNase inactivation
and removal, but it is time-consuming, and organic extractions
often cause some sample loss. Sample loss can be minimized by back
extraction of the phenol:chloroform phase, but this adds another
step to an already time-consuming procedure. Additionally, many
people prefer to avoid working with hazardous phenol.
EDTA chelation of cations: The
addition of EDTA to DNase digestion reactions chelates ions in the
digestion buffer, that are required for DNase I activity. The DNase
I can then be safely heat inactivated without loss of RNA. However,
Mg2+ is needed for enzymatic activity of both the reverse
transcriptase and the thermostable DNA polymerase. Thus the chelation
capacity of the EDTA must be saturated with additional ions prior
to subsequent enzymatic reactions. This can make the assembly of
a simple reaction quite complicated.
RNA purification: Some
filter-based RNA isolation methods treat with DNase directly on the
filter after binding of the lysate. This treatment may not completely
eliminate contaminating DNA because the DNase will not be in an optimal
environment for digestion (traces of lysis solution and other contaminants
may interfere with optimal digestion). Alternatively, RNA preparations
that have been treated with DNase in solution, can be purified away
from DNase over such columns. Although this technique adequately
removes DNase from the prep, it requires both an extra step, and
expensive materials.
DNA-free Removes the DNA, and Then Removes
the DNase
DNA-free DNase Treatment & Removal Reagents
are one of Ambion's latest tools designed to simplify RNA preparation
for RT-PCR. With DNA-free, genomic DNA contamination can be
removed from any RNA preparation without incurring RNA loss or risk
of degradation. The DNA-free DNase Treatment & Removal Reagents
provide RNase-free DNase I and optimized DNase Reaction Buffer for
the complete digestion of contaminating DNA in RNA samples. Ambion's
DNase I is prepared with ultra pure reagents and is not released
for sale until it is shown to be both highly effective at eliminating
DNA, and devoid of RNase activity. The 10X DNase Reaction Buffer
is designed for optimal DNase I activity. DNA-free also includes
a novel DNase Removal Reagent to quickly eliminate the DNase after
treatment. This unique reagent effectively removes all traces of
DNase and divalent cations from the reaction mixture after DNA digestion
is complete. The DNase/cation removal step is fast taking
only three minutes to complete. After DNase digestion, The Removal
Reagent is added, the tube flicked to mix, and the solution incubated
for 2 minutes at room temperature. DNase and ions are bound by the
DNase Removal Reagent which is spun out with a quick centrifugation
leaving the RNA in the supernatant ready for RT-PCR. This simple
method avoids messy organic extraction or heat inactivation of DNase
I that may put your RNA at risk. DNA-free DNase Treatment & Removal
Reagents are also available as components of the RNAqueous®-4PCR
Kit (see sidebar, "RNA Isolation for RT-PCR").
| Cat# |
Product Name |
Size |
| AM1906 |
DNA-free™ |
50 rxns |
| AM1914 |
RNAqueous®-4PCR Kit |
30 rxns |
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