Abstract

BackgroundThe astounding regenerative abilities of planarian flatworms prompt steadily growing interest in examining their molecular foundation. Planarian regeneration was found to require hundreds of genes and is hence a complex process. Thus, RNA interference followed by transcriptome-wide gene expression analysis by RNA-seq is a popular technique to study the impact of any particular planarian gene on regeneration. Typically, the removal of ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is the first step of all RNA-seq library preparation protocols. To date, rRNA removal in planarians was primarily achieved by the enrichment of polyadenylated (poly(A)) transcripts. However, to better reflect transcriptome dynamics and to cover also non-poly(A) transcripts, a procedure for the targeted removal of rRNA in planarians is needed.ResultsIn this study, we describe a workflow for the efficient depletion of rRNA in the planarian model species S. mediterranea. Our protocol is based on subtractive hybridization using organism-specific probes. Importantly, the designed probes also deplete rRNA of other freshwater triclad families, a fact that considerably broadens the applicability of our protocol. We tested our approach on total RNA isolated from stem cells (termed neoblasts) of S. mediterranea and compared ribodepleted libraries with publicly available poly(A)-enriched ones. Overall, mRNA levels after ribodepletion were consistent with poly(A) libraries. However, ribodepleted libraries revealed higher transcript levels for transposable elements and histone mRNAs that remained underrepresented in poly(A) libraries. As neoblasts experience high transposon activity this suggests that ribodepleted libraries better reflect the transcriptional dynamics of planarian stem cells. Furthermore, the presented ribodepletion procedure was successfully expanded to the removal of ribosomal RNA from the gram-negative bacterium Salmonella typhimurium.ConclusionsThe ribodepletion protocol presented here ensures the efficient rRNA removal from low input total planarian RNA, which can be further processed for RNA-seq applications. Resulting libraries contain less than 2% rRNA. Moreover, for a cost-effective and efficient removal of rRNA prior to sequencing applications our procedure might be adapted to any prokaryotic or eukaryotic species of choice.

Highlights

  • The astounding regenerative abilities of planarian flatworms prompt steadily growing interest in examining their molecular foundation

  • Development of an efficient rRNA depletion protocol for planarians To deplete ribosomal RNA from planarian total RNA, we chose to develop a protocol based on the hybridization of rRNA-specific biotinylated DNA probes to ribosomal RNA and the capture of the resulting biotinylated rRNADNA hybrids by use of streptavidin-coated magnetic beads (Fig. 1a)

  • The probes were devised in antisense orientation to the following planarian rRNA species: 28S, 18S type I and type II, 16S, 12S, 5S, 5.8S, internal transcribed spacer (ITS) 1 and ITS 2 (Additional file 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The astounding regenerative abilities of planarian flatworms prompt steadily growing interest in examining their molecular foundation. Freshwater planarians of the species Schmidtea mediterranea are well known for their extraordinary ability to regenerate This ability is supported by the presence of a large population of adult pluripotent stem cells, termed neoblasts [1]. For any informative RNA-seq library preparation, ribosomal RNA, comprising > 80% of total RNA, has to be removed To achieve this goal two strategies can be pursued: either polyadenylated (poly(A)) RNA transcripts are enriched or rRNA is removed. The enrichment of poly(A) transcripts ensures better coverage of coding genes compared to ribodepleted samples, when sequenced to similar depth [7]. Most prokaryotic RNAs lack poly(A) tails, making rRNA depletion crucial for the study of bacterial transcriptomes [14]

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