Literature DB >> 17084936

Striptease on glass: validation of an improved stripping procedure for in situ microarrays.

Karin Hahnke1, Marc Jacobsen, Andreas Gruetzkau, Joachim R Gruen, Markus Koch, Masashi Emoto, Thomas F Meyer, Anna Walduck, Stefan H E Kaufmann, Hans-Joachim Mollenkopf.   

Abstract

Microarrays have rapidly become an indispensable tool for gene analysis. Microarray experiments can be cost prohibitive, however, largely due to the price of the arrays themselves. Whilst different methods for stripping filter arrays on membranes have been established, only very few protocols are published for thermal and chemical stripping of microarrays on glass. Most of these protocols for stripping microarrays on glass were developed in combination with specific surface chemistry and different coatings for covalently immobilizing presynthesized DNA in a deposition process. We have developed a method for stripping commercial in situ microarrays using a multi-step procedure. We present a method that uses mild chemical degradation complemented by enzymatic treatment. We took advantage of the differences in biochemical properties of covalently linked DNA oligonucleotides on in situ synthesized microarrays and the antisense cRNA hybridization probes. The success of stripping protocols for microarrays on glass was critically dependent on the type of arrays, the nature of sample used for hybridization, as well as hybridization and washing conditions. The protocol employs alkali hydrolysis of the cRNA, several enzymatic degradation steps using RNAses and Proteinase K, combined with appropriate washing steps. Stripped arrays were rehybridized using the same protocols as for new microarrays. The stripping method was validated with microarrays from different suppliers and rehybridization of stripped in situ arrays yielded comparable results to hybridizations done on unused, new arrays with no significant loss in precision or accuracy. We show that stripping of commercial in situ arrays is feasible and that reuse of stripped arrays gave similar results compared to unused ones. This was true even for biological samples that show only slight differences in their expression profiles. Our analyses indicate that the stripping procedure does not significantly influence data quality derived from post-primary hybridizations. The method is robust, easy to perform, inexpensive, and results after reuse are of comparable accuracy to new arrays.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17084936     DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiotec.2006.09.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biotechnol        ISSN: 0168-1656            Impact factor:   3.307


  3 in total

1.  Stripping custom microRNA microarrays and the lessons learned about probe-slide interactions.

Authors:  Xiaoxiao Zhang; Wayne Xu; Jiankang Tan; Yan Zeng
Journal:  Anal Biochem       Date:  2008-12-24       Impact factor: 3.365

2.  Investigation of parameters that affect the success rate of microarray-based allele-specific hybridization assays.

Authors:  Lena Poulsen; Martin Jensen Søe; Lisbeth Birk Møller; Martin Dufva
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-03-22       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Multi-stringency wash of partially hybridized 60-mer probes reveals that the stringency along the probe decreases with distance from the microarray surface.

Authors:  Lena Poulsen; Martin Jensen Søe; Detlef Snakenborg; Lisbeth Birk Møller; Martin Dufva
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2008-09-19       Impact factor: 16.971

  3 in total

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