Method Article
We describe a method for microarray analysis to determine relative aminoacylation levels of all tRNAs from S. cerivisiae.
Part 1: Isolation of total charged tRNA
Part 2: Preparation of tRNA Standards
Part 3: Cy3/Cy5 labeling of tRNA
Part 4: Hybridization and Analysis of the Microarray
Part 5: Representative Results
When isolated properly the total RNA sample should produce a very clean spectrum with an OD260:OD280 ratio near 2. There should be no detectable protein or phenol contamination. When run on 1% agarose gels, a strong tRNA band should be observed with other possible nucleic acid bands varying between organisms. After oxidation a clean tRNA band should be observed. If a sample is noticeably weaker than other samples or smearing is observed, samples should not be used for microarrays. Microarrays should have very low background which is an order of magnitude lower than the weakest tRNA probe. High background is usually due to problems during the washing steps. This can usually be fixed by preparing fresh wash solutions and thoroughly washing all equipment and tubing to remove residual and precipitated SDS.
Step | Details |
O-ring conditioning | 75°C, 2 min |
Introduce sample | 60°C |
Denature Sample | 90°C, 5 min |
Hybridization | 60°C, 16h |
Wash 1 | 50°C, flow 10s hold 20s |
Wash 2 | 42°C, flow 10s hold 20s |
Wash 3 | 42°C, flow 10s hold 20s |
Table 1: Hybridization protocol
We present a method for simultaneously determining the relative charging levels of all tRNAs at the genomic scale. The protocol presented here has been optimized for S. cerevisiae, and it has also been successfully used to measure tRNA charging profiles in E. coli and human cell cultures. It can be modified to accommodate any organism with known genome sequences (allowing for annotation of all tRNA genes) as long as total charged tRNA can be obtained.
No conflicts of interest declared.
The yeast work in the Pan lab was funded by a grant from Ajinomoto, Inc. Japan and National Institutes of Health Training Grant T32GM007183-33. We thank Dr. Ronald Wek at the Indiana University School of Medicine for long-term collaboration on the yeast projects. We also thank Dr. Kimberly Dittmar for developing the tRNA charging microarray method.
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Microspin G-25 columns | GE Healthcare | 25-5325-01 | |
E. coli tRNAPhe | Sigma-Aldrich | R3143 | |
E. coli tRNATyr | Sigma-Aldrich | R0258 | |
E. coli tRNALys | Sigma-Aldrich | R6018 | |
E. coli aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases | Sigma-Aldrich | A3646 | |
T4 DNA ligase | USB Corp., Affymetrix | 70042X | |
PerfectHyb Plus | Sigma-Aldrich | H-7033 | |
Hyb4 station | Digilab | ||
GenePix 4000B scanner | Axon instruments | ||
GenePix 6.0 | Axon instruments |
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