Elucidation of a non-thermal mechanism for DNA/RNA fragmentation and protein degradation when using Lyse-It.

Rapid sample preparation is one of the leading bottlenecks to low-cost and efficient sample component detection. To overcome this setback, a technology known as Lyse-It has been developed to rapidly (less than 60 seconds) lyse Gram-positive and-negative bacteria alike, while simultaneously fragmenti...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tonya M Santaus, Ken Greenberg, Prabhdeep Suri, Chris D Geddes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225475
id doaj-2475d06aea8d4ff281fd7f2a8fc2ca09
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2475d06aea8d4ff281fd7f2a8fc2ca092021-03-04T11:20:48ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-011412e022547510.1371/journal.pone.0225475Elucidation of a non-thermal mechanism for DNA/RNA fragmentation and protein degradation when using Lyse-It.Tonya M SantausKen GreenbergPrabhdeep SuriChris D GeddesRapid sample preparation is one of the leading bottlenecks to low-cost and efficient sample component detection. To overcome this setback, a technology known as Lyse-It has been developed to rapidly (less than 60 seconds) lyse Gram-positive and-negative bacteria alike, while simultaneously fragmenting DNA/RNA and proteins into tunable sizes. This technology has been used with a variety of organisms, but the underlying mechanism behind how the technology actually works to fragment DNA/RNA and proteins has hitherto been studied. It is generally understood how temperature affects cellular lysing, but for DNA/RNA and protein degradation, the temperature and amount of energy introduced by microwave irradiation of the sample, cannot explain the degradation of the biomolecules to the extent that was being observed. Thus, an investigation into the microwave generation of reactive oxygen species, in particular singlet oxygen, hydroxyl radicals, and superoxide anion radicals, was undertaken. Herein, we probe one aspect, the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which is thought to contribute to a non-thermal mechanism behind biomolecule fragmentation with the Lyse-It technology. By utilizing off/on (Photoinduced electron transfer) PET fluorescent-based probes highly specific for reactive oxygen species, it was found that as oxygen concentration in the sample and/or microwave irradiation power increases, more reactive oxygen species are generated and ultimately, more oxidation and biomolecule fragmentation occurs within the microwave cavity.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225475
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tonya M Santaus
Ken Greenberg
Prabhdeep Suri
Chris D Geddes
spellingShingle Tonya M Santaus
Ken Greenberg
Prabhdeep Suri
Chris D Geddes
Elucidation of a non-thermal mechanism for DNA/RNA fragmentation and protein degradation when using Lyse-It.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Tonya M Santaus
Ken Greenberg
Prabhdeep Suri
Chris D Geddes
author_sort Tonya M Santaus
title Elucidation of a non-thermal mechanism for DNA/RNA fragmentation and protein degradation when using Lyse-It.
title_short Elucidation of a non-thermal mechanism for DNA/RNA fragmentation and protein degradation when using Lyse-It.
title_full Elucidation of a non-thermal mechanism for DNA/RNA fragmentation and protein degradation when using Lyse-It.
title_fullStr Elucidation of a non-thermal mechanism for DNA/RNA fragmentation and protein degradation when using Lyse-It.
title_full_unstemmed Elucidation of a non-thermal mechanism for DNA/RNA fragmentation and protein degradation when using Lyse-It.
title_sort elucidation of a non-thermal mechanism for dna/rna fragmentation and protein degradation when using lyse-it.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Rapid sample preparation is one of the leading bottlenecks to low-cost and efficient sample component detection. To overcome this setback, a technology known as Lyse-It has been developed to rapidly (less than 60 seconds) lyse Gram-positive and-negative bacteria alike, while simultaneously fragmenting DNA/RNA and proteins into tunable sizes. This technology has been used with a variety of organisms, but the underlying mechanism behind how the technology actually works to fragment DNA/RNA and proteins has hitherto been studied. It is generally understood how temperature affects cellular lysing, but for DNA/RNA and protein degradation, the temperature and amount of energy introduced by microwave irradiation of the sample, cannot explain the degradation of the biomolecules to the extent that was being observed. Thus, an investigation into the microwave generation of reactive oxygen species, in particular singlet oxygen, hydroxyl radicals, and superoxide anion radicals, was undertaken. Herein, we probe one aspect, the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which is thought to contribute to a non-thermal mechanism behind biomolecule fragmentation with the Lyse-It technology. By utilizing off/on (Photoinduced electron transfer) PET fluorescent-based probes highly specific for reactive oxygen species, it was found that as oxygen concentration in the sample and/or microwave irradiation power increases, more reactive oxygen species are generated and ultimately, more oxidation and biomolecule fragmentation occurs within the microwave cavity.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225475
work_keys_str_mv AT tonyamsantaus elucidationofanonthermalmechanismfordnarnafragmentationandproteindegradationwhenusinglyseit
AT kengreenberg elucidationofanonthermalmechanismfordnarnafragmentationandproteindegradationwhenusinglyseit
AT prabhdeepsuri elucidationofanonthermalmechanismfordnarnafragmentationandproteindegradationwhenusinglyseit
AT chrisdgeddes elucidationofanonthermalmechanismfordnarnafragmentationandproteindegradationwhenusinglyseit
_version_ 1714803763289522176