Effects of long-term ethanol storage of blood samples on the estimation of telomere length
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Springer
Materia
Degradation Ethanol Long-term qPCR Room temperature Storage effects Telomere measurement
Date
2022-08-15Referencia bibliográfica
Precioso, M... [et al.]. Effects of long-term ethanol storage of blood samples on the estimation of telomere length. Evol Ecol (2022). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s10682-022-10198-1]
Sponsorship
Spanish Government CGL201455362-P BES-2015-075675 IJC2018-036411-IAbstract
Telomeres, DNA structures located at the end of eukaryotic chromosomes, shorten with
each cellular cycle. The shortening rate is affected by factors associated with stress, and,
thus telomere length has been used as a biomarker of ageing, disease, and different life
history trade-offs. Telomere research has received much attention in the last decades,
however there is still a wide variety of factors that may affect telomere measurements
and to date no study has thoroughly evaluated the possible long-term effect of a storage
medium on telomere measurements. In this study we evaluated the long-term effects of
ethanol on relative telomere length (RTL) measured by qPCR, using blood samples of
magpies collected over twelve years and stored in absolute ethanol at room temperature.
We firstly tested whether storage time had an effect on RTL and secondly we modelled the
effect of time of storage (from 1 to 12 years) in differences in RTL from DNA extracted
twice in consecutive years from the same blood sample. We also tested whether individual
amplification efficiencies were influenced by storage time, and whether this could affect
our results. Our study provides evidence of an effect of storage time on telomere length
measurements. Importantly, this effect shows a pattern of decreasing loss of telomere sequence
with storage time that stops after approximate 4 years of storage, which suggests
that telomeres may degrade in blood samples stored in ethanol. Our method to quantify
the effect of storage time could be used to evaluate other storage buffers and methods.
Our results highlight the need to evaluate the long-term effects of storage on telomere
measurements, particularly in long-term studies.