Abstract

BackgroundIn bacterial systems, the sequence congruence of genomic DNA (gDNA) and cDNA obtained following reverse transcription of RNA, makes gDNA an automatic target for qPCR primers. This could lead to aberrant gene expression quantification. This is why a rigorous treatment of bacterial RNA with DNase I is usually required to remove any traces of carryover gDNA. As bacterial RNA is known to be extremely labile, any procedure that affects RNA yield, such as DNase I treatment, can be logically assumed to also influence detection and quantification of gene transcripts, leading to either an underestimation or no detection at all. To address such problems, we have developed a novel and versatile TaqMan RT-qPCR compliant anchor sequence (MYT4) for quantifying bacterial gene transcripts without the need for DNase I treatment.ResultsA non-genomic anchor sequence, henceforth referred to as MYT4 was designed using a synthetic DNA sequence called myIC, previously shown to share no significant homology to any known accession in the GenBank database. The sequence characteristic of MYT4 was kept within the design parameters required for the TaqMan RT-qPCR platform. The specificity and robustness of the novel MYT4 sequence was validated on RNA extracted from the bacterium Pseudomonas sp. LBUM300, grown under liquid culture and spiked soil conditions. Two transcripts, namely hcnC and phlD, were quantified from these two experimental systems. Using the MYT4 anchor, no RT-qPCR signal was detected from non-DNase I treated RNA, while strong signals were obtained using conventional reverse primers and RT-qPCR, indicating the presence of carryover gDNA in the RNA, extracted from either liquid culture or soil. Serial treatment of the RNA samples with DNase I (required to achieve absolute gDNA elimination) resulted in 50-70% loss of RNA which, when submitted to conventional RT-qPCR, significantly altered the transcript numbers detected when compared to the MYT4-based approach.ConclusionsImplementation of the versatile approach described in this study, which can be “retrofitted” to any existing TaqMan RT-qPCR system, should contribute to reducing the time and lowering the costs required to perform adequate bacterial RNA purification for downstream quantification of gene transcripts.

Highlights

  • In bacterial systems, the sequence congruence of genomic DNA and cDNA obtained following reverse transcription of RNA, makes gDNA an automatic target for qPCR primers

  • Substitution of reverse primers with MYT4: effect on amplification efficiency As the MYT4 primer is the only replacement during DNFRT-qPCR, we evaluated if this replacement affected the overall efficiency of amplification (Figure 2)

  • When the same RNA samples were subjected to serial DNase I treatment, the CT values changed to 35-38 (DNase R1), 41-42 (DNase R2) and no detection (DNase R3), when analyzed under similar assay conditions, i.e. RT minus assay using Conv-RT-qPCR (Figure 4)

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Summary

Introduction

The sequence congruence of genomic DNA (gDNA) and cDNA obtained following reverse transcription of RNA, makes gDNA an automatic target for qPCR primers. This could lead to aberrant gene expression quantification. The sequence congruence of the cDNA with its gDNA, makes the latter an automatic target for RT-qPCR primers, leading to an aberrant gene expression pattern To alleviate such confounding effects of carryover gDNA, the main practical solution is to exhaustively treat the RNA sample with the enzyme DNase I [9,10,11]. The whole work flow involved in this procedure, which includes handling of RNA at sub-optimal temperatures of 37°C and 65-70°C during incubation and denaturation, respectively, can lead to its hydrolysis, deleteriously affecting the overall integrity of the RNA preparation [13]

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