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  • 260/230 and RNA-seq library prep

    Hi,
    Does anyone have experience of low 260/230 values for RNA impacting adversely on Illumina truseq total RNA library prep for RNA-seq? I have good 260/280 values and adequate quantities of RNA but low 260/230s. I have heard various opinions about the utility of 260/230 ratios but wondered what other experiences were? Thanks!

  • #2
    Originally posted by TAR76 View Post
    Hi,
    Does anyone have experience of low 260/230 values for RNA impacting adversely on Illumina truseq total RNA library prep for RNA-seq? I have good 260/280 values and adequate quantities of RNA but low 260/230s. I have heard various opinions about the utility of 260/230 ratios but wondered what other experiences were? Thanks!
    My opinion is that since you are probably using a Nanodrop that does all the work of producing an entire spectrum for you, why not just look at that rather than use a ratio metric designed back when you had to manually change wavelengths on most spectrophotometers?

    If you did, you might have a chance of identifying the contaminating substance by its UV absorbance spectrum.

    If you are willing to consider the spectrum, check out my thread on this subject:

    Techniques and protocol discussions on sample preparation, library generation, methods and ideas


    The short answer is that the most common culprits for causing your A230 to skew higher are:

    (1) Acetic acid and salts thereof.
    (2) Guanidine -- HCl and Isothiocyanate salts have different spectra
    (3) Betamercaptoethanol.

    Note that I don't include phenol! Phenol has a higher absorbance at A260 than at A230, so it can't be responsible for decreasing your 260/230 ratio. Oh, unless you are using Tris-acetate buffer to equilibrate your phenol. But then it is the acetate, not the phenol decreasing your 260/230 ratio.

    --
    Phillip

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    • #3
      Yes, we have seen that low 260/230 ratios negatively affects the TruSeq total RNA prep. When we experience low ratios, we always do a wash on a MinElute filter to improve purity.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by LTJensen View Post
        Yes, we have seen that low 260/230 ratios negatively affects the TruSeq total RNA prep. When we experience low ratios, we always do a wash on a MinElute filter to improve purity.
        Ah, a ritual of purification. I was in a lab once that had a shrine to the "oligod". Lab members would burn pieces of nitrocellulose there before an important molecular experiment.

        Here is something to think about -- what about all the "contaminants" that don't absorb UV? How are you detecting those?

        --
        Phillip

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        • #5
          I see your point pmiguel, nevertheless the ritual worked for us... When ratios are fine, we never have problems with that particular protocol.

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