RNase and DEPC Treatment:
Fact or Laboratory Myth
Researchers are usually trained in RNA isolation
and analysis methods by one another or by technical manuals. Experimental
procedures are often not questioned and quickly become dogma. Furthermore,
it is difficult to find literature to document the "facts" taught
by mentors and technical manuals. One of these potential myths
is the use of DEPC treatment to make solutions RNase-free. At Ambion,
we have systematically investigated some of the DEPC fables, and
the results are discussed below. Watch upcoming issues of TechNotes
in which Ambion will put other RNA "truths" to the test.
1. Autoclaving is not effective
at eliminating RNase in solution because the RNases simply renature
as the solution cools.
FALSE, but... Autoclaving
alone does indeed inactivate a substantial amount of RNase A
(Figure 1). Various concentrations of RNase A were added to PBS
and autoclaved. Aliquots of each solution were mixed with a 304
base 32P-labeled RNA probe and incubated at 37°C
for one hour, followed by electrophoresis and exposure to film.
Without autoclaving, the probe begins to degrade at an RNase
concentration of 100 pg/ml. Autoclaving inactivates enough of
the RNase A to protect the probe from degradation up to a concentration
of 1 µg/ml. Note that only a portion of the RNase is inactivated
by autoclaving, otherwise the RNA probe would remain intact at
any RNase concentration. Autoclaving alone may be sufficient
to eliminate enough RNase for some applications. However, since
neither the extent of RNase contamination nor at what RNase concentration
the assay is sensitive is known, DEPC should be used as an added
precaution. Also note that these experiments were only performed
on RNase A and may not hold true for other RNases.
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Figure 1. Effect
of Autoclaving on RNase Activity. Various
concentrations of RNase A were added to PBS and autoclaved
for 25 minutes. 1 µl of each solution was mixed with
1 ng of a 5 x 104 cpm RNA probe which was 304
bases long and incubated at 37°C for one hour. 5 µl
of the reaction was assessed on a 5% acrylamide/8 M urea
gel and exposed to film for 5 hours with an intensifying
screen. |
2. Autoclaving inactivates DEPC.
TRUE. Autoclaving
does inactivate DEPC by causing hydrolysis of diethylpyrocarbonate.
CO2 and EtOH are released as reaction by-products.
DEPC has a half-life of approximately 30 minutes in water, and
at a DEPC concentration of 0.1%, solutions autoclaved for 15
minutes/liter can be assumed to be DEPC-free.
3. Autoclaving DEPC-containing solutions should
be of sufficient duration to rid the solution of any smell.
FALSE. A
faint EtOH smell may linger after autoclaving, but more commonly
a sweet, fruity smell is observed. This is caused by the EtOH
by-product combining with trace carboxylic acid contaminates
and forming volatile esters. It does not mean that trace DEPC
remains in the solution.
4. Solutions containing Tris cannot be treated
with DEPC.
TRUE. Tris contains an amino group
which "sops up" DEPC and makes it unavailable to inactivate RNase
(Figure 2). 1 M solutions of Tris, MOPS, HEPES and PBS were prepared,
and 0.1% or 1% DEPC was added to each. One µg/ml RNase A
was also added to each solution. The solutions were autoclaved
and aliquots of each solution were mixed with a 304 base 32P-labeled
RNA probe and incubated at 37°C for one hour. Probe integrity
was assessed by electrophoresis and exposure to film. Tris and
HEPES do indeed make DEPC unavailable to inactivate RNase at a
DEPC concentration of 0.1% (recommended by most protocols). However,
1% DEPC is sufficient to overcome this effect. When 1M MOPS and
PBS are treated with DEPC, the DEPC remains available to inactive
RNase at both concentrations (0.1% and 1%). It would be impossible
to predict the different interactions of DEPC with all molecular
biology reagents. The most cautious approach for making RNase-free
solutions would be to mix molecular biology grade powdered reagents
up in DEPC-treated water. Alternatively, many pre-made nuclease-free
solutions can be purchased from Ambion and other companies.
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Figure 2. Effects
of DEPC Treatment of Various Buffers. One µg/ml
RNase A was added to various buffers along with 0.1% or
1% DEPC. Solutions were vigorously shaken for 1 minute,
incubated for 1 hour at room temperature and autoclaved
for 25 minutes. 1 µl of each solution was mixed with
1 ng of a 5 x 104 cpm 304 nt RNA probe and incubated
at 37°C for one hour. 5 µl of the reaction was
assessed on a 5% acrylamide/8 M urea gel and exposed overnight
to film. |
5. 0.1% DEPC is sufficient to
inhibit any amount of RNase in a solution.
FALSE,
but... The amount
of DEPC required to inactivate RNase increases as the amount
of contaminating RNase in a solution increases (Figure 3).
100, 500, and 1000 ng/ml RNase A was added to water followed
by various amounts of DEPC. The solutions were autoclaved,
and aliquots of each solution were mixed with a 304 base 32P
labeled RNA probe and incubated at 37°C for one hour followed
by electrophoresis and exposure to film. Untreated solutions
or those treated with 0.01% DEPC could inactivate 100 ng/ml
RNase A. When the RNase concentration was increased to 500
ng/ml, the DEPC concentration was insufficient to inactivate
the RNase, and the probe degraded. Increasing the DEPC concentration
to 0.1% protects the probe from RNase A up to 500 ng/ml and
a 1% DEPC solution inactivates RNase A at a concentration of
1000 ng/ml. 0.1% DEPC is probably adequate to inactivate
most RNase contamination from environmental sources and from
laboratory procedures such as ribonuclease protection assays
and plasmid preparations in which larger amounts of RNase are
used.
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Figure 3. Effects
of Varying Percentages of DEPC on Increasing Concentrations
of RNase. Various concentrations
of RNase A were added to aliquots of water, shaken vigorously
for one minute, incubated for one hour at room temperature
and autoclaved for 25 minutes. 1 µl of each solution
was mixed with 1 ng of a 5 x 104 cpm RNA 304
nt probe and incubated at 37°C for one hour. 5 µl
of the reaction was assessed on a 5% acrylamide/8 M urea
gel and exposed overnight to film. |
6. If 0.1% DEPC works well to inhibit RNase,
1% should work even better.
TRUE, but... Increasing
DEPC concentrations inactivate increasing amounts of RNase A
contamination (Figure 3). However, it is also true that high
levels of residual DEPC or DEPC by-products in a solution can
inhibit some enzymatic reactions or chemically alter (carboxymethylate)
RNA. It has been documented that DEPC byproducts in RNA samples
can inhibit in vitro translation reactions (Winkler, unpublished
results). For this study, we tested transcription reactions for
DEPC inhibition effects. Template DNA was dried to completion
in a vacuum centrifuge and resuspended in 0.01%, 0.1% or 1% DEPC-treated
water. Duplicate MAXIscript transcription reactions were
assembled using 32P-UTP, and the same concentration
of DEPC treated water bought up the volume. The reactions were
incubated and percent incorporation was assessed via TCA precipitation.
The average percent incorporation were as follows:
% DEPC in reaction |
% incorporation |
0.01 |
64 |
0.10 |
59 |
1.00 |
53 |
The above data indicate that increasing
amounts of DEPC increasingly inhibit transcription. Again, 0.1%
DEPC is probably sufficient to inhibit most RNases with minimal
effect on reactions. If DEPC is suspect in inhibiting reactions,
high quality (MilliQÌ) or autoclaved water can probably be substituted
into the reaction. Water can be tested using Ambion's RNaseAlert Kit
or see Ambion's Technical Bulletin #166,
Nuclease and Protease Testing: Laboratory and Commercial Considerations,
which describes an RNase testing protocol similar to that used
in this study.
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