Unconfigured Ad

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • epibio
    Registered Vendor
    • May 2010
    • 89

    Ribosomal RNA removal for Gram-negative bacterial RNA

    EPICENTRE recently added a new ribosomal RNA removal kit to its lineup. The Ribo-Zero™ rRNA Removal Kit (Gram-Negative Bacteria) removes >99% of the 23S and 16S, and >97% of the 5S rRNA from both intact and partially degraded RNA from Gram-negative species. A kit for Gram-positive species is in the works and should be available soon.
    Connect with Epicentre: Facebook | Twitter
  • kwalters
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2009
    • 1

    #2
    Has anyone used Solexa to characterize bacterial transcriptomes from infected mammalian tissue?

    Comment

    • epibio
      Registered Vendor
      • May 2010
      • 89

      #3
      Not with this kit, so far. Theoretically, you could use oligo (dT) to get rid of eukaryotic mRNA, and then remove ribosomal RNA with two passes (eukaryotic and bacterial). However, you'd be dealing with very small amounts of bacterial RNA.

      A better solution may be Ambion's MicrobEnrich kit, followed by the RiboZero kit. With either approach, you could prepare Illumina-compatible libraries for sequencing.
      Connect with Epicentre: Facebook | Twitter

      Comment

      • pmiguel
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2008
        • 2328

        #4
        What sorts of yields do you get from E. coli RNA?

        We have been trying to use Invitrogen ribominus but our yields are abysmal. We start with 10 ug of RNA and usually end up with less than 100 ng (by fluorimetry) after a single pass. (For the SOLiD, two passes and 200-500 ng of ribo-minus RNA are recommended.)

        --
        Phillip

        Comment

        • epibio
          Registered Vendor
          • May 2010
          • 89

          #5
          From 1-5 micrograms E. coli total RNA, we get around 130-600 ng rRNA-depleted RNA, after one round of treatment, as measured by RiboGreen. Bioanalyzer measurements give slightly higher values.
          Connect with Epicentre: Facebook | Twitter

          Comment

          • mimila
            Member
            • Nov 2010
            • 12

            #6
            Is it possible to get evaluation kit from epibio? I have bought couple of times the earlier kit (mRNA only) but it gave to small amounts of mRNA. Is the new kit more efficient?
            Martha

            Comment

            • epibio
              Registered Vendor
              • May 2010
              • 89

              #7
              The Ribo-Zero kits use a completely different method from the mRNA-Only kits for rRNA removal. They are more efficient in terms of rRNA removal. The yield will depend on your sample type and purity.

              We do have an evaluation program in the U.S.; for other countries, you would need to contact your local distributor.
              Connect with Epicentre: Facebook | Twitter

              Comment

              • mimila
                Member
                • Nov 2010
                • 12

                #8
                Thank you for an answer. I can not find how that kit works.
                Is that method similar to the microbexpress? I used microbexpress and it did not work for me (the results were worse than with mRNA only)
                I work with Gluconacetobacter (Acetobacteriaceae). Do you have any information for usage this kit in bacteria different than E.coli?
                Is ribozero enzymatic or hybridization method?
                Martha

                Comment

                • epibio
                  Registered Vendor
                  • May 2010
                  • 89

                  #9
                  The Ribo-Zero kits do not use enzymatic digestion, but are based on a proprietary hybridization technology for rRNA removal. The Gram-negative kit will work with a broad range of species, including Gluconacetobacter. I'm not sure why the MicrobExpress kit didn't work for you; it might be a good idea to troubleshoot that with Ambion tech support before trying a different method.
                  Connect with Epicentre: Facebook | Twitter

                  Comment

                  • protist
                    Senior Member
                    • Jan 2009
                    • 101

                    #10
                    Have either of the Ribo Zero kits been tested with Mycobaterial strains?

                    Comment

                    • epibio
                      Registered Vendor
                      • May 2010
                      • 89

                      #11
                      No, they haven't. If you're interested in evaluating a kit, please contact our UK distributor, Cambio Ltd.
                      Connect with Epicentre: Facebook | Twitter

                      Comment

                      • mimila
                        Member
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 12

                        #12
                        What is the average quantity of mRNA obtained from 5ug of RNA from bacteria? Do you have any values? I know that depends on organism but I would like to know what can I expect. Is the quality of total RNA important (I mean integrity)?

                        Comment

                        • pmiguel
                          Senior Member
                          • Aug 2008
                          • 2328

                          #13
                          The 5th post in the thread answers your question for E. coli.

                          I don't work for Epicentre, but Ribo-zero looks like it is in the same "family" of ribo-depletion methods as Invitrogen's Ribo-minus. If so, it would work by hybridization to ribosomal RNAs by oligos attached to magnetic beads. Subsequent removal of the beads then also removes the ribosomal RNA. Okay, that leaves out a step, but the basic idea is there.

                          We typically got very poor yields when using ribo-minus. I have no idea why. Maybe something in our RNA preps in concert with something in the kit was degrading the non-bound RNA? Or we were getting non-specific binding?

                          Anyway, ribo-depletion methods that rely on oligo hybridization will be less capable of removing rRNA that is degraded to the extent that coverage of the oligos on the rRNA is less than 100%. The fewer oligos that bind to your species's rRNA, the more critical that the rRNA be perfectly intact to allow its removal.

                          --
                          Phillip

                          Comment

                          • mimila
                            Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 12

                            #14
                            Thank you Phillip,could you tell me what do you mean writing poor? For example how much is it from 5 ug of total RNA? Less than 0,5 ug?

                            Comment

                            • pmiguel
                              Senior Member
                              • Aug 2008
                              • 2328

                              #15
                              0.5 ug from 5 ug is a 10% yield. 10% is near the maximum I ever see for non-ribosomal RNA in a sample. I can check to see what we were getting for ribo-minus on E. coli.

                              --
                              Phillip

                              Comment

                              Latest Articles

                              Collapse

                              ad_right_rmr

                              Collapse

                              News

                              Collapse

                              Topics Statistics Last Post
                              Started by SEQadmin2, Today, 10:09 AM
                              0 responses
                              8 views
                              0 reactions
                              Last Post SEQadmin2  
                              Started by SEQadmin2, Yesterday, 08:59 AM
                              0 responses
                              14 views
                              0 reactions
                              Last Post SEQadmin2  
                              Started by SEQadmin2, 06-02-2026, 12:03 PM
                              0 responses
                              22 views
                              0 reactions
                              Last Post SEQadmin2  
                              Started by SEQadmin2, 06-02-2026, 11:40 AM
                              0 responses
                              19 views
                              0 reactions
                              Last Post SEQadmin2  
                              Working...