Challenges for Studying Bacterial Host Interactions
Gene expression studies of bacterial pathogens following host cell interaction have been especially challenging (1, 2). Namely purifying adequate amounts of high quality RNA for bacterial transcriptome analysis has proven to be difficult. Harvesting bacteria and purifying bacterial RNA from infected tissues or in vitro cell cultures without altering gene expression is the first problematic step. In addition, bacterial cell numbers in diseased tissues or organs are frequently small in comparison to the numbers of host cells present. Even when host cells are infected in vitro, the numbers of bacteria that adhere to or invade cells is often low. Therefore, purifying total RNA from a mixture of eukaryotic cells and bacteria most often results in a vast excess of eukaryotic cellular RNA and very little bacterial RNA. Frequently too little bacterial RNA is present for generating adequate signals on microarrays.
Start By Preserving RNA Expression Profiles
Figure 2: Recommended Procedures for Purifying Bacterial mRNAs for Whole Genome Expression Analysis Following Bacteria-host Cell Interactions. |
Isolating Bacterial RNA From Host-Pathogen Mixtures
Following selective lysis of host cells, bacteria can be harvested and RNA purified with Ambion's RiboPure Bacteria Kit. RiboPure Bacteria is the only commercially available kit containing all reagents necessary for phenol-extraction and glass fiber filter purification of bacterial RNA. It is also compatible with RNAlater. RNA purified with RiboPure Bacteria is of extremely high quality and well suited for genome expression analysis with DNA arrays.
Enriching for Bacterial mRNA
The MICROB Enrich Kit employs a novel technology to selectively remove >90% of human, mouse, or rat total RNA from a mixed population of mammalian and prokaryotic RNA. The remaining bacterial RNA can then be used in downstream applications such as array analysis. The MICROB Enrich reaction is scalable (up to 100 µg). The kit can be used to remove a total of 500 µg of mammalian RNA from a mixed population of mammalian/bacterial RNA. Typically, the MICROBEnrich Kit is used for 20 reactions, each consisting of mixed RNA samples containing up to 25 µg of mouse, rat, or human RNA. For further enrichment of bacterial mRNA, 16S and 23S bacterial rRNA can be removed from the bacterial total RNA using Ambion's MICROBExpress™ Kit. The MICROB Enrich procedure can be seamlessly integrated with Ambion's MICROB Express Kit for elimination of bacterial large subunit rRNAs by further enrichment of bacterial mRNA.
References
- Sassetti C, Rubin EJ. (2002) Genome analyses of microbial virulence. Curr Opin Microbiol 5: 27-32.
- Cummings CA, Rehlman DA. (2000) Using DNA microarrays to study host-microbe interactions. Emerg Inf Dis 6: 513-25.
- Staudinger BJ, Oberdoerster MA, Lewis PJ, Rosen H. (2002) mRNA expression profiles for Escherichia coli ingested by normal and phagocyte oxidase-deficient human neutrophils. J Clin Invest 110(8): 1151-63.
- Grifantini R, Bartolini E, Muzzi A, Draghi M, Frigimelica E, Berger J, Ratti G, Petracca R, Galli G, Agnusdei M, Giuliani MM, Santini L, Brunelli B, Tettelin H, Rappuoli R, Randazzo F, Grandi G. (2002) Previously unrecognized vaccine candidates against groupB meningococcus identified by DNA microarrays. Nature Biotechnol 20: 914-21.
- Hsiao LL, Howard RJ, Aikawa M, Taraschi TF. (1991) Modification of host cell membrane lipid composition by the intra-erythrocytic human malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. Biochem J 274: 121-32.
- Gould FK, Freeman R, Law D, Moriarty T. (1988) Lysis in detection of intracellular organisms. Lancet 2: 461.