Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2818122 Gene 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

The development of fast, reliable and inexpensive phenol protocol is described for the isolation of RNA from bacterial biofilm producers. The method was tested on Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) and other biofilm-producing gram-negative microorganisms and provided the highest integrity of RNA recovery in comparison to other methods reported here. In parallel experiments, bacterial lysis with Qiagen, NucleoSpin RNAII, InnuREP RNA Mini, Trizol and MasterPure RNA extraction Kits using standard protocols consistently gave low RNA yields with an absence of integrity. The boiling method presented here yielded high concentration of RNA that was free from 16S and 23S rRNA, contained 5S RNA. Higher yields due to improved biofilm bacterial cell lysis were achieved with an added hot phenol incubation step without the need for a bead mill or the enzyme. This method when used in conjunction with the Qiagen RNeasy Mini kit, RNA isolation was a success with greater integrity and contained undegraded 16S and 23S rRNA and did not require further purification. Contaminating DNA was a problem with the RNA processing samples; we used quantitative real-time PCR (RT-qPCR) to measure the recovery of RNA from bacterial biofilm cells using the method described here.

► The commercial kits used Column based silica not suitable for the recovery of RNA from the biofilm positive bacteria. ► We have improved a low-cost effective method of cell wall disruption for the potential biofilm pathogen S. aureus, without the need for a bead glass or the enzyme, which employs the use of phenol protocol with only three steps. ► This method can be used in conjunction with the commercial RNA kits that use silica-based column and yields high concentration and highest integrity of recovered RNA.

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Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Genetics
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