Abstract
Background: Isolation of RNA from skin biopsies presents a challenge, due to the tough nature of skin tissue and a high presence of RNases. As we lacked the dedicated equipment, i.e. homogenizer or bead-beater, needed for the available RNA from skin isolation methods, we adapted and tested our zebrafish single-embryo RNA-isolation protocol for RNA isolation from skin punch biopsies. Findings. We tested our new RNA-isolation protocol in two experiments: a large-scale study with 97 human skin samples, and a small study with 16 mouse skin samples. Human skin was sampled with 4.0 mm biopsy punches and for the mouse skin different punch diameter sizes were tested; 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, and 2.5 mm. The average RNA yield in human samples was 1.5 g with an average RNA quality RIN value of 8.1. For the mouse biopsies, the average RNA yield was 2.4 g with an average RIN value of 7.5. For 96% of the human biopsies and 100% of the mouse biopsies we obtained enough high-quality RNA. The RNA samples were successfully tested in a transcriptomics analysis using the Affymetrix and Roche NimbleGen platforms. Conclusions: Using our new RNA-isolation protocol, we were able to consistently isolate high-quality RNA, which is apt for further transcriptomics analysis. Furthermore, this method is already useable on biopsy material obtained with a punch diameter as small as 1.5 mm. © 2011 Breit et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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CITATION STYLE
Bruning, O., Rodenburg, W., Radonic, T., Zwinderman, A. H., De Vries, A., Breit, T. M., & De Jong, M. (2011). RNA isolation for transcriptomics of human and mouse small skin biopsies. BMC Research Notes, 4. https://doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-4-438
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