Abstract

Transcriptomic profiling of skin disease using next generation sequencing allows for detailed information on aspects of RNA biology including gene expression, non-coding regulatory elements and gene splicing. The application of RNA sequencing to human skin disease and cancer is often hampered by degraded RNA. Here we describe a protocol that allows for consistently intact RNA to be extracted from snap frozen skin biopsy samples, which has been validated in a clinical trial setting. Human skin tumour punch biopsies (n=28) ranging from 4-6mm in diameter were obtained from 14 patients with an inherited skin tumour syndrome (CYLD cutaneous syndrome) and frozen in liquid nitrogen prior to being stored at -80°C. These samples were then subject to cyrostat sectioning, allowing for histological assessment, and were homogenised using a bead-based lysis platform. RNA extraction was performed using a silica column-based system. RNA concentration was measured using fluorescent quantitation and RNA integrity assessed using microfluidic gel electrophoresis. We also processed normal skin biopsies using the same protocol (n=10). The mean RNA integrity score of the tumour and normal samples was 9.5, and the quantity of RNA obtained from the small amounts of tissue used exceeded requirements for RNA-seq library generation. We propose that the method of RNA extraction suggested here allows for transcriptomic profiling from small pieces of human tissue without the need for PCR amplification during library preparation. This protocol could be utilised in healthy and diseased skin to improve mechanistic understanding in a range of human skin diseases.

Highlights

  • Skin has evolved as a protective barrier against environmental stresses such as physical damage, ultraviolet radiation exposure and pathogenic infections

  • We describe a protocol that allows for consistently intact RNA to be extracted from snap frozen skin biopsy samples, which has been validated in a clinical trial setting

  • We propose that the method of RNA extraction suggested here allows for transcriptomic profiling from small pieces of human tissue without the need for PCR amplification during library preparation

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Summary

Introduction

Skin has evolved as a protective barrier against environmental stresses such as physical damage, ultraviolet radiation exposure and pathogenic infections. Obtaining high quality RNA of sufficient quantity from small samples typical of those derived from punch biopsies is, problematic The reasons for this are diverse and include suboptimal tissue disruption and endogenous RNase activity, resulting in skin being a tissue that is amongst the most challenging to obtain intact RNA from (Walker et al, 2016) (Kaufmann et al, 1980). The hydrolysis or cleavage of RNA can occur spontaneously, without the presence of a catalyst or enzyme (Elliott & Ladomery, 2011) Together, these challenges may discourage the inclusion of transcriptomics in clinical trials involving human skin, where such information may offer mechanistic insights

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