METHOD, LYSIS SOLUTION AND KIT FOR SELECTIVELY DEPLETING ANIMAL NUCLEIC ACIDS IN A SAMPLE
20200239871 · 2020-07-30
Inventors
- Johann KUBICEK (Köln, DE)
- Thorsten SINGER (Solingen, DE)
- Antje-Katrin SANDER (Hünxe, DE)
- Eva HÄNSSLER (Leverkusen, DE)
- Dominic O'NEIL (Hilden, DE)
Cpc classification
C12N15/1003
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N9/22
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N15/1003
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12Q1/6806
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C12N15/10
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N9/22
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
The present invention relates to a method for selectively depleting animal nucleic acids from non-animal nucleic acids in a sample, which comprises animal cells and at least one further type of cells, selected from microbial cells and plant cells or a combination thereof, to a lysis solution A to be used in and to a kit to carry out said method as well as to the use of a particular silica membrane as both, a filtration matrix for separating essentially intact microbial and/or plant cells from lysed animal cells and an adsorption matrix for nucleic acids, in particular in a method according to the present invention.
Claims
1. A lysis solution, comprising at least one saponin, a water-soluble salt selected from the group consisting of acetates, sulfates, glutamates, and any mixture thereof; a viscosity modifying agent selected from the group consisting of sucrose, glucose, and a mixture thereof; and optionally a polyanionic sulfonate.
2. The lysis solution of claim 1, wherein the at least one saponin is present in an amount ranging from about 0.01 to about 15% (w/v), based on the whole lysis solution, wherein the aforementioned concentration range refers to the total amount of saponin.
3. The lysis solution of claim 1, wherein the water-soluble salt is present in a concentration ranging from 10 to 1.000 mM, wherein the aforementioned concentration range refers to the total amount of the water-soluble salt based on the whole lysis solution.
4. The lysis solution of claim 1, wherein the viscosity modifying agent is present in a concentration ranging from 10 to 1.000 mM, wherein the aforementioned concentration range refers to the total amount of the viscosity modifying agent based on the whole lysis solution.
5. The lysis solution of claim 1, wherein the polyanionic sulfonate is present in a concentration ranging from 0.001 to 50 mM, wherein the aforementioned concentration range refers to the total amount of the polyanionic surfactant based on the whole lysis solution.
6. The lysis solution of claim 1, wherein said lysis solution is chaotrope-free and further comprises at least one additional nonionic surfactant in an amount from 0.01 to 15% (w/v) based on the whole lysis solution.
7. The lysis solution of claim 6, wherein the additional nonionic surfactant is selected from the group consisting of a sorbitan ester of fatty acids, a polyoxyethylene sorbitan ester of fatty acids, a polyoxyalkylene ether of fatty alcohols, a polyoxyalkylene ether of alkylphenols, a poloxamer, and mixtures of any thereof.
8. A kit for selectively depleting animal nucleic acids from a sample comprising animal cells and microbial and/or plant cells, the kit comprising: (i) the lysis solution of claim 1, and (ii) optionally, an endonuclease capable of degrading both RNA as well as DNA or a mixture of at least one DNase and at least one RNase, and (iii) optionally, a filter for separating intact microbial and/or plant cells from a liquid part of the sample, wherein the liquid part of the sample includes digested animal nucleic acids, by retaining the microbial and/or plant cells while the liquid part of the sample passes through the filter as a filtrate.
9. The kit according to claim 8, further comprising at least one of the following components: instructions for using the kit, chromatographic means for purifying, concentrating and/or isolating microbial and/or plant cells or nucleic acids, agents or buffers for lysing the microbial and/or plant cells, binding mediators or binding buffers, washing buffers, elution buffers, further means for filtering and/or centrifuging the sample, or any combination thereof.
10. The kit according to claim 8, wherein the filter of (iii) fulfills at least one of the following conditions: a) the filter comprises at least one part having a pore size being in the range of 0.1-1.5 m, preferably 0.2-1.0 m, more preferred 0.3-0.8 m (particularly 0.25+/0.050.8 m) and most preferred 0.5-0.7 m; and b) the filter comprises polyester, polyethersulfone (PES), cellulose, cellulose acetate (CA), mixed cellulose esters (MCE), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), polyamide (PA), Nylon, polypropylene (PP), ceramics, glass fibers, silica, or any combination or mixture thereof.
Description
LIST OF FIGURES
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[0122]
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EXAMPLES
[0127] General Protocol A for Processing e.g. a Blood Sample According to the Method of the Present Invention
[0128] 1 mL of the respective blood sample was pipetted into a 2 mL round-bottom Eppendorf tube already containing 500 L of an lysis solution A according to the present invention and mixed by pulse-vortexing. The mixture was incubated at room temperature for 30 min on a end-over-end shaker. As an animal lysis buffer any suitable lysis buffer can be used. The lysis solution A used in the examples comprised 7.73 wt-% of saponin, 0.19 M of L-glutamic acid monosodium salt monohydrate, 0.48 M sucrose and 1.92 mM polyanethol sulfonic acid sodium salt.
[0129] The mixture was then spun for 10 min at 10,000g in a centrifuge at room temperature. The supernatant was discarded.
[0130] 600 L of a buffer comprising 50 mM Tris pH 7.5, 1.5 mM MgCl.sub.2 and 20 mM NaCl, and 8 L of an enzyme mix (DNAse/RNAse and/or restriction enzymes) or a suitable amount of an endonuclease (e.g. Benzoase, available by Merck, Germany, Cyanase, available byRiboSolutions, USA, or Pierce Universal nuclease, available by Thermo Scientific, Germany) were added to the pellet. The resulting mixture was mixed by pulse-vortexing. The tube was briefly spun in a centrifuge to remove drops from the inside of the lid and then incubated at 37 C. for 30 min with shaking (600 rpm) in a heating block or at room temperature in an end-over-end shaker.
[0131] Then 40 L it of Proteinase K (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany) were added and the sample was mixed by pulse-vortexing. After briefly spinning the tube in a centrifuge to remove drops from the inside of the lid the sample was incubated at room temperature for 30 min in an end-over-end shaker. To remove drops from the inside of the lid the tube was spun for about 5 min.
[0132] The samples were then either carefully applied onto a spin column equipped with a filter having a pore size of 0.25+/0.05 m, the spin column was placed in an appropriate vessel and spun in a centrifuge at 10,000g for 3 min at room temperature and the filtrate was discarded; or the samples were spun in a centrifuge at 10,000g for 15 min to pellet the bacterial cells present in the sample. The pellet might be washed once to three times with PBS.
[0133] At this time it is possible to collect the essentially intact non-animal cells from the filter. If lysis of the non-animal cells and subsequent analysis of the non-animal nucleic acids is desired, the following additional steps are carried out:
[0134] When a filter was used, for washing the cells 600 L of water were applied onto the filter and the spin column comprising said filter was spun in a centrifuge at 10,000g for 3 min at room temperature. The filtrate was discarded.
[0135] 180 L of the above mentioned lysis solution A, now supplemented with 20 g/L Lysozyme, were added onto the filter and the filter was incubated at 37 C. for 30 min with shaking at 600 rpm in a heating block.
[0136] 200 L of buffer AL (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany), supplemented with 20 L of Proteinase K (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany), were added to the spin column which was then incubated at 56 C. for 30 min with shaking at 600 rpm in a heating block.
[0137] To isolate the non-animal nucleic acids by adsorption to a silica membrane, 200 L ethanol (96-100%) were added to the sample and mixed by pulse-vortexing for 15 s. The sample was then applied onto a silica membrane suitable for nucleic acid binding, for example a silica membrane contained in the spin columns commercially available under the trademark name QIAamp or MinElute by QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany, and processed according to the manufacturer's protocol.
[0138] General protocol B for Processing e.g. a Buccal Swab Sample According to the Method of the Present Invention
[0139] Coplan FLOQ swabs were used to sample oral (buccal) mucosa cells and then each swab was swirled in 1 mL PBS. Bacteria were directly added to the sample to circumvent irregularies due to differences in washing efficiency. Approximatly 110.sup.4 or 110.sup.6 cells were used per sample depending on the according experiment. To have homogenous sample material, several swab samples were combined and the cell suspension was then split up between several samples.
[0140] 1 mL of the respective sample was pipetted into a 2 mL round-bottom Eppendorf tube already containing 500 L of a lysis solution A according to the present invention and mixed by pulse-vortexing. The mixture was incubated at room temperature for 30 min on a end-over-end shaker. As an animal lysis buffer any suitable lysis buffer can be used. The lysis solution A used in the examples comprised 7.73 wt-% of saponin, 0.19 M of L-glutamic acid monosodium salt monohydrate, 0.48 M sucrose and optionally 1.92 mM polyanethol sulfonic acid sodium salt, if present.
[0141] The mixture was then spun for 10 min at 10,000g in a centrifuge at room temperature. The supernatant was discarded.
[0142] 600 L of a buffer comprising 50 mM Tris pH 7.5, 1.5 mM MgCl.sub.2 and 20 mM NaCl, and 8 L of an enzyme mix (DNAse/RNAse and/or restriction enzymes) or a suitable amount of an endonuclease (e.g. Benzoase, available by Merck, Germany, Cyanase, available byRiboSolutions, USA, or Pierce Universal nuclease, available by Thermo Scientific, Germany) were added to the pellet. The resulting mixture was mixed by pulse-vortexing. The tube was briefly spun in a centrifuge to remove drops from the inside of the lid and then incubated at 37 C. for 30 min with shaking (600 rpm) in a heating block or at room temperature in an end-over-end shaker.
[0143] Then 40 L of Proteinase K (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany) were added and the sample was mixed by pulse-vortexing. After briefly spinning the tube in a centrifuge to remove drops from the inside of the lid the sample was incubated at room temperature for 30 min in an end-over-end shaker. To remove drops from the inside of the lid the tube was spun for about 5 min.
[0144] The samples were then either carefully applied onto a spin column equipped with a filter having a pore size of 0.25+/0.05 m, the spin column was placed in an appropriate vessel and spun in a centrifuge at 10,000g for 3 min at room temperature and the filtrate was discarded; or the samples were spun in a centrifuge at 10,000g for 15 min to pellet the bacterial cells present in the sample. The pellet might be washed once to three times with PBS.
[0145] At this time it is possible to collect the essentially intact non-animal cells from the filter or of the pellet. If lysis of the non-animal cells and subsequent analysis of the non-animal nucleic acids is desired, the following additional steps are carried out:
[0146] When the microbial cells were separated by filtration, the cells of the filter may be either lysed as described above in Protocol A, or they may be resuspended in 200 l of lysis buffer ATL and treated as described below for the pellet after centrifugation.
[0147] The pellets of the samples after centrifugation were resuspended in 200 l of lysis buffer ATL (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany), transferred into Pathogen Lysis tubes L (QIAGEN) and mechanically lysed by means of glass beads treating the samples according to the FastPrep protocol (QIAGEN). After addition of 40 L Protease K, incubation at 56 C. for 30 min, 200 APL buffer were added and the samples were incubated at 70 C. for 10 min.
[0148] To isolate the non-animal nucleic acids by adsorption to a silica membrane, 200 L ethanol (96-100%) were added to the sample and mixed by pulse-vortexing for 15 s. The sample was then applied onto a silica membrane suitable for nucleic acid binding, for example a silica membrane contained in the spin columns commercially available under the trademark name QIAamp or MinElute by QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany, and processed according to the manufacturer's protocol.
Example 1: Depletion of Human DNA from Blood Samples Spiked with Bacillus Subtilis
[0149] 1 mL human whole blood was spiked with 110.sup.6 cells of Bacillus subtilis and processed according to the method of the invention as described in the above General Protocol A using a filter for separating the microbial cells.
[0150] For comparison, 200 L of human whole blood were spiked with the same number (110.sup.6 cells) of Bacillus subtilis cells and processed using the commercially available QIAamp kit according to the manufacturer's protocol (QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany).
[0151] The nucleic acids present in the eluate obtained at the end of each of the protocol were then amplified in rt-PCR. The obtained CT-values are shown in
[0152] In each lane on the left the ct values referring to the microbial nucleic acid is shown (Bac Sub), on the right the result referring to the human nucleic acid is shown (Human 2).
[0153] Even though the initial amount of human DNA in the comparative sample was only 1/5 of the amount of human DNA in the sample processed according to the method of the present invention due to the smaller sample volume used in the comparative sample, the purified comparative sample comprises much more human DNA than the samples processed according to the method of the present invention. In the samples processed according to the method of the present invention on the other hand the amount of human DNA is close to the detection limit of rt-PCR. The amount of bacterial DNA is comparable for both methods.
[0154] The cycle threshold (CT) value is defined as the number of cycles required for the fluorescent signal detecting positive reaction in real time PCR to cross the threshold (background level). CT values are inversely proportional to the amount of target nucleic acid in the sample, so that a low CT value indicates a high amount of target nucleic acid in the sample and vice versa.
Example 2: WNA and WGA of DNA Isolated by the Method of the Present Invention for NGS Application
[0155] Samples and comparative samples were prepared as described in Example 1. The obtained nucleic acids are then amplified by three PCR methods: rtPCR as in Example 1, whole genome amplification (WGA), or whole nucleic acid amplification (WNA). WGA was carried out using the REPLIg-Mini Kit of QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany according to the instructions.
[0156] Whole nucleic acid amplification is carried out by isolationg the nucleic acids of the bacteria according to Example 1, carrying out a reverse trasscription of the whole nucleic acids and thereafter making a WGA by using the REPLIg-Mini Kit of QIAGEN, Hilden, Germany according to the instructions.
[0157] The resuls are shown in
[0158] This example demonstrates that non-animal nucleic acids isolated by the method of the present invention are suitable for amplification in WNA and WGA, respectively, and thus for next generation sequence (NGS) applications.
Example 3: Isolation of Bacterial DNA from Stabilized Blood Samples
[0159] Samples of human blood, each of them having a volume of 1 mL, were spiked with 110.sup.6 cells of Streptococcus haemolyticus and supplemented with heparin, EDTA or citrate, respectively, as a stabilizer (in amounts as usual for blood conservation, i.e. heparin 17 IU/mL, EDTA 1.8 mg/mL, citrate 0.38%).
[0160] Samples stabilized with heparin, EDTA and citrate, respectively, were processed according to the method of the present invention as described in the above General Protocol immediately after spiking with the bacterial cells, while other samples were stored for 2 or 6 days, respectively, at room temperature or 4 C., respectively before being processed according to the above General Protocol A using a filter for separating the microbial cells.
[0161] The nucleic acids being present in the eluate obtained after carrying out of the above General Protocol A were amplified in rt-PCR.
[0162] The results are presented in
[0163] These results demonstrate that the method of the present invention is useful for isolating non-animal nucleic acids from stabilized blood samples as well.
Example 4: Isolation of Bacterial DNA from Swabs
[0164] Samples were treated according to General protocol B. An amount of about 10.sup.6 B. subtilis cells were added to buccal swab samples in 1 mL PBS as described above and used for preparing the samples.
[0165] In a first approach the microbial cells are separated from the remainder of the samples after lysis of the human cells by a filtration step, in a second approach by centrifugation. The lysis of the human cells was carried out by lysis solution A, either comprising polyanethol sulfonic acid (+SPS) or being free of polyanethol sulfonic acid (SPS), in any case with the aid of glass beads. As a positive control the nucleic acids of 110.sup.6 B. subtilis cells were isolated by using the QIAamp kit (QIAGEN, Hilden, German) according to the instructions. For comparison one of the samples (buccal swap, spiked with B. subtilis) was treated as well with the QIAamp kit (without prior lysis of the human cells). As a negative control (no target) served H.sub.2O.
[0166] The nucleic acids being present in the eluate obtained after carrying out of the above General Protocol B or after treatment with the QIAamp kit were amplified in rt-PCR, the resulting CT-values are shown in
[0167] The samples shown in
[0168] The samples shown in
Example 5: Next Generation Sequencing of DNA Obtained by the Method of the Present Invention
[0169] The eluate obtained from samples, which were prepared according to General protocol A and the comparative method of example 1 were subjected to whole genome amplification by using the REPLI-g Mini Kit of QIAGEN according to the instructions of the Kit.
[0170] The percentage of DNA matched against human and bacterial origin, respectively, for each sample is shown in