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*Contributed equally to this work Published: Nov 5, 2020 DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.3810 Views: 2390
Reviewed by: Amit Kumar DeyXiaofeng Zhou
Abstract
Most bacteria in natural ecosystems form biofilms-a bacterial community, surrounded by a polymer matrix that consists mostly of exopolysaccharides, proteins, and nucleic acids. Extracellular RNA as a matrix component is involved in biofilm formation-the fact that was confirmed by direct detection of extracellular RNA in the biofilm matrix, and by an interruption of the biofilm's structure with RNases. Number of protocols describing isolation of RNA from biofilm matrix are limited and usually involve uncommon equipment and reagents. Here we describe simple method for extracellular RNA isolation from biofilm matrix using basic laboratory reagent and equipment. Key steps of the protocol include separation of matrix and bacterial cells with high ionic solution of NaCl, RNA precipitation with LiCl and clean up with option to use inexpensive column for plasmid DNA isolation rather than specialized RNA kits. Described protocol allows to isolate extracellular RNA suitable for further molecular biology procedures such as sequencing, RT-PCR and cloning in less than one day (excluding time for biofilm growing up).
Keywords: BiofilmBackground
Biofilm matrix provides resistance to different influences (antibacterial drugs, disinfectants, mechanical forces) and creates environment for coordinated regulation of different processes (Svenningsen, 2018). RNA presents in extracellular biofilm matrix and forms the main cross-linking elastic copolymer of RNA-DNA (Seviour et al., 2019). Treatment of biofilms with RNases resulted in significant loss of biofilm mass and underline importance of RNA for maintenance of biofilm integrity (Lee et al., 2019). At the same time sources and roles of RNA in biofilm matrix remain poorly explored.
The use of solutions with high ionic strength allows separation of extracellular biofilm matrix without subjecting embedded cells to lysis (Chiba et al., 2015). At the same time further workflow of RNA purification might be significantly affected with high salt concentration (i.e., phase separation during phenol-chloroform extraction). Another important aspect of such method of separation includes relatively large volume of the dissolved biofilm matrix, so there is a need of efficient RNA precipitation for further purification steps. The method of RNA isolation from biofilm matrix described by Seviour et al. (2019) includes matrix separation with high ionic liquids, for example, 40% (v/v) 1-ethyl-3-479 methylimidazolium acetate (EMIM Ac): 60% (v/v) N,N-dimethyl acetamide (DMAc) and Perchloric acid (70%) and further steps of RNA isolation by chromatographic separation, but these steps include some harsh conditions (i.e., incubation at 55 °C for 16 h and long centrifugation steps). It is not easily applicable in molecular biology laboratories. We imply idea of using high ionic liquid from both studies, implement LiCl precipitation to concentrate and redissolve RNA and clean up with inexpensive silica columns adopted from (Yaffe et al., 2012). Finally, we offer a simple, fast, and inexpensive method of extraction of extracellular RNA (exRNA), moreover intracellular cell RNA (cRNA) might be purified from the same biofilm sample. Protocol utilizes common laboratory reagents and equipment and enables to isolate extracellular RNA suitable for further procedures. Such a method may be applicable for studying the molecular mechanisms of biofilm formation and maintenance.
Materials and Reagents
50 ml Falcon tubes (Corning, catalog number: CLS430829 )
15 ml Falcon tubes (Corning, catalog number: CLS430791 )
1.5 ml DNA LoBind tube (Eppendorf, catalog number: 00 30108051 )
QIAprep Spin Miniprep Columns (Qiagen, catalog number: 27115 ) or alternative kit-based RNA clean-up: RNeasy Plus Mini Kit (Qiagen, catalog number: 74134)
2 ml collection tubes (Qiagen, catalog number: 19201 )
Pseudomonas aeruginosa ExoS strain (i.e., PAO1 strain)
LB medium (BD Difco, catalog number: DF0446-07-5 )
96-98% ethanol molecular biology grade (keep at -20 °C)
Nuclease-free water (Sigma-Aldrich, catalog number: W4502 )
Sodium Chloride (Sigma-Aldrich, catalog number: 71376 )
Trizol® Reagent (Invitrogen, catalog number: 15596026 )
Chloroform (Sigma-Aldrich, catalog number: 32211 )
Lithium Chloride (Sigma-Aldrich, catalog number: L9650 )
Sodium Acetate (Sigma-Aldrich, catalog number: S2889 )
DNase I without RNase activity with 10x reaction buffer (Thermo Scientific, catalog number: EN0521 )
Prepare following solutions before starting protocol:
70% ethanol made with nuclease-free water (store at -20 °C)
1.8 M NaCl solution in nuclease-free water (store at room temperature)
8 M LiCl solution in nuclease-free water (store at room temperature)
3 M NaOAc in nuclease-free water (store at room temperature)
Optional for RNA electrophoretic analysis:
Agarose (Promega, number catalog: V3121 )
TAE buffer, Molecular Biology Grade, 40x (Promega, catalog number: V4271 )
UltraPure Ethidium Bromide 10 mg/ml (Thermo Scientific, catalog number: 15585011 )
Equipment
Refrigerated сentrifuge (Eppendorf, model: 5910R )
Dry Block Thermostat (Bio-San, model: BS-010412 )
Basic Microbiological Incubators (Fisherbrand, catalog number: 15-015-2633 )
Set of pipettes 100 to 1,000 μl; 20 to 200 μl; 1 to 10 μl (Thermo ScientificTM FinnpipetteTM F2 catalog numbers: 4642090 ; 4642030 ; 4642080 )
Optional equipment for RNA quality and quantity analysis:
NanoDrop 2000 for RNA quality analysis and A260/A280 ratio estimation (Thermo Scientific; catalog number: ND 2000C )
UV-transilluminator (312 nm) for electrophoresis visualization (Vilber Lourmat, ECX-15.M catalog number: 2131 1502 1 )
Electrophoresis System (Helicon, model: SE-1 )
Procedure
Category
Microbiology > Microbial biofilm > Biofilm culture
Molecular Biology > RNA > RNA extraction
Molecular Biology > RNA > RNA purification
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