Team:UNICAMP-Brazil/Teste
From 2009.igem.org
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==Isolation of RNA using Trizol Reagent (Invitrogen)== | ==Isolation of RNA using Trizol Reagent (Invitrogen)== | ||
- | 1.Homogenization | + | 1. Homogenization |
a. Tissues | a. Tissues | ||
Homogenize tissue samples in 1 ml of TRIzol® Reagent per 50-100 mg of tissue using a glass-Teflon® or power homogenizer (Polytron, or Tekmar's TISSUMIZER® or equivalent). The sample volume should not exceed 10% of the volume of TRIzol Reagent used for homogenization. | Homogenize tissue samples in 1 ml of TRIzol® Reagent per 50-100 mg of tissue using a glass-Teflon® or power homogenizer (Polytron, or Tekmar's TISSUMIZER® or equivalent). The sample volume should not exceed 10% of the volume of TRIzol Reagent used for homogenization. | ||
- | b.Cells Grown in Suspension | + | b. Cells Grown in Suspension |
Pellet cells by centrifugation. Lyse cells in TRIzol® Reagent by repetitive pipetting. Use 1 ml of the reagent per 5-10 × 106 of animal, plant or yeast cells, or per 1 × | Pellet cells by centrifugation. Lyse cells in TRIzol® Reagent by repetitive pipetting. Use 1 ml of the reagent per 5-10 × 106 of animal, plant or yeast cells, or per 1 × | ||
107 bacterial cells. Washing cells before addition of TRIzol® Reagent should be avoided as this increases the possibility of mRNA degradation. Disruption of some yeast and bacterial cells may require the use of a homogenizer. | 107 bacterial cells. Washing cells before addition of TRIzol® Reagent should be avoided as this increases the possibility of mRNA degradation. Disruption of some yeast and bacterial cells may require the use of a homogenizer. | ||
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3. Table-top centrifuges that can attain a maximum of 2,600 × g are suitable for use in these protocols if the centrifugation time is increased to 30-60 minutes in steps 2 and 3. | 3. Table-top centrifuges that can attain a maximum of 2,600 × g are suitable for use in these protocols if the centrifugation time is increased to 30-60 minutes in steps 2 and 3. | ||
- | Troubleshooting | + | |
+ | '''Troubleshooting''' | ||
+ | |||
Expected yields of RNA per mg of tissue or 1 x 106 cultured cells | Expected yields of RNA per mg of tissue or 1 x 106 cultured cells | ||
- | + | ||
- | + | * Liver and spleen, 6-10 µg | |
- | + | * Kidney, 3-4 µg | |
- | + | * Skeletal muscles and brain, 1-1.5 µg | |
- | + | * Placenta, 1-4 µg | |
- | + | * Epithelial cells (1 x 106 cultured cells), 8-15 µg | |
+ | * Fibroblasts, (1 x106 cultured cells) 5-7 µg | ||
+ | |||
Low yield | Low yield | ||
- | + | * Incomplete homogenization or lysis of samples | |
- | + | * Final RNA pellet incompletely redissolved | |
- | A260/A280 ratio <1.65 | + | A260/A280 ratio < 1.65 |
RNA sample was diluted in water instead of TE prior to spectrophotometric analysis. Low ionic strength and low pH solutions increase absorbance at 280 nm (6,7). | RNA sample was diluted in water instead of TE prior to spectrophotometric analysis. Low ionic strength and low pH solutions increase absorbance at 280 nm (6,7). | ||
- | + | * Sample homogenized in too small a reagent volume. | |
- | + | * Following homogenization, samples were not stored at room temperature | |
- | + | for 5 minutes. | |
- | + | * The aqueous phase was contaminated with the phenol phase. | |
+ | * Incomplete dissolution of the final RNA pellet. | ||
RNA degradation | RNA degradation | ||
- | + | * Tissues were not immediately processed or frozen after removal | |
- | + | from the animal. | |
- | + | * Samples used for isolation, or the isolated RNA preparations were | |
- | + | stored at -5 to-20°C, instead of -60 to -70°C. | |
- | + | * Cells were dispersed by trypsin digestion. | |
+ | * Aqueous solutions or tubes were not RNase-free. | ||
+ | * Formaldehyde used for agarose-gel electrophoresis had a pH below 3.5. | ||
DNA contamination | DNA contamination | ||
- | + | * Sample homogenized in too small a reagent volume. | |
- | + | * Samples used for the isolation contained organic solvents | |
+ | (e.g., ethanol, DMSO), strong buffers, or alkaline solution. | ||
Proteoglycan and polysaccharide contamination | Proteoglycan and polysaccharide contamination |
Latest revision as of 18:00, 24 September 2009
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