| Literature DB >> 19014630 |
Kelli J Kochan1, M Elisabete J Amaral, Richa Agarwala, Alejandro A Schäffer, Penny K Riggs.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fluorescence of dyes bound to double-stranded PCR products has been utilized extensively in various real-time quantitative PCR applications, including post-amplification dissociation curve analysis, or differentiation of amplicon length or sequence composition. Despite the current era of whole-genome sequencing, mapping tools such as radiation hybrid DNA panels remain useful aids for sequence assembly, focused resequencing efforts, and for building physical maps of species that have not yet been sequenced. For placement of specific, individual genes or markers on a map, low-throughput methods remain commonplace. Typically, PCR amplification of DNA from each panel cell line is followed by gel electrophoresis and scoring of each clone for the presence or absence of PCR product. To improve sensitivity and efficiency of radiation hybrid panel analysis in comparison to gel-based methods, we adapted fluorescence-based real-time PCR and dissociation curve analysis for use as a novel scoring method.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 19014630 PMCID: PMC2621213 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-9-544
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Markers chosen for mapping analysis
| AGLA233 | microsatellite | F: 5'-tgcaaacatccacgtagcataaata | [ |
| AKT-1 | STS/gene | F: 5'-cacctgaccaagacgacagcat | UniSTS: 277959; Accession# X61036 |
| AKT-2 | microsatellite | F: 5'-tgcccattcccagagccctgt | [ |
| BM3413 | microsatellite | F: 5'-tccctggtaaccaatgaattc | [ |
| BMC5221 | microsatellite | F: 5'-agcaaggagaacaggcattc | [ |
| BMS1494 | microsatellite | F: 5'-tctggagctgcaaaagacc | [ |
| BMS1561 | microsatellite | F: 5'-acccacatgttgggagg | Stone, 1996 (unpublished) Accession# G18764 |
| BMS2382 | microsatellite | F: 5'-agcacggagtcgttgtctg | [ |
| BMS868 | microsatellite | F: 5'-tcatccaaccatctcatcct | [ |
| CC530547 | STS/gene | F: 5'-tgatggattacctgatgcttcttgc | UniSTS: 476716 |
| CHGA | STS/gene | F: 5'-cccttgcctttcaacgattatct | F: new design from Accession# NC_007319.2 (5199500352008294) |
| DIK2116 | microsatellite | F: 5'-cagccacaactggaactcg | [ |
| DIK2367 | microsatellite | F: 5'-tgctctatgaatcccaagctg | [ |
| DIK2586 | microsatellite | F: 5'-ggacgctgacttggaaggta | [ |
| DIK2821 | microsatellite | F: 5'-cctttctgtcgtctcccttg | [ |
| DIK2849 | microsatellite | F: 5'-cacagacgagatcagctcca | [ |
| DIK3001 | microsatellite | F: 5'-ctcggggccaaaaaccaaaaccta | [ |
| DIK3009 | microsatellite | F: 5'-tggggcccggaggagtggtg | [ |
| DIK3023 | microsatellite | F: 5'-tcttgccacctttggcttt | [ |
| DIK4322 | microsatellite | F: 5'-tccatagtgccagtgagctg | [ |
| DIK4894 | microsatellite | F: 5'-ccagctttcttcctttacagtg | [ |
| GRP58 | STS/gene | F: 5'-gaaactccattttgctgtag | new design from Accession# NC_007319.2 (4901848149040683) |
| IDVGA-39 | microsatellite | F: 5'-acggtgggaacatcttgtcacta | [ |
| IGF1R | STS/gene | F: 5'-ggaacatggtggacgtggac | new design from Accession# NC_007319.2 (93003629360647) |
| ILSTS054 | microsatellite | F: 5'-gaggatcttgattttgatgtcc | [ |
| ILSTS092 | microsatellite | F: 5'-gagaaactttgggctgctgc | [ |
| MBIP | STS/gene | F: 5'-actattcactggctgaacttg | UniSTS: 278723 |
| MFGE8 | STS/gene | F: 5'-ggcacaaccgtatcacc | new design from Accession# NC_007319.2 (2021101820195989) |
| MULGE4 | microsatellite | F: 5'-gcaacccttctgatgtcatgaacc | [ |
| RM151 | microsatellite | F: 5'-cccagaggtgacaacatttccag | [ |
| SERPINA1 | STS/gene | F: 5'-aagaacctgtatcactccgaagc | new design from Accession# NC_007319.2 (5259062252599991) |
Figure 1Marker typing by qPCR and conventional method. Dissociation curve (A) and gel image (B) of DIK2849 as an example of unambiguous +/- scoring of clones by both dissociation curve and agarose gel electrophoresis in buffalo (BBU), hamster (A23) and selected RH clones. In (A), the dissociation curve is plotted as the first derivative of fluorescence relative to temperature in the SDS software view. Clones #71 (positive for BBU DNA) and #78 (negative for BBU DNA) are indicated along with hamster negative control and buffalo positive control. Peaks are easily differentiated for scoring.
Figure 2Differentiation of similarly-sized products by qPCR. Dissociation curve (A) and gel image (B) of IGF1R in buffalo (BBU), hamster (A23), no-template control (NTC) and selected RH clones. River buffalo and hamster products are indistinguishable on agarose gels, but are easily separated by differential dissociation curve analysis. Note that in clones positive for buffalo DNA (e.g. #8) hamster DNA is also amplified, as expected.
Figure 3Sequence variation of similarly-sized products. CLUSTAL W (v. 1.83; [39]) alignment of IGF1R PCR product sequences of hamster (A23) and river buffalo (BBU). The primer sequences are underlined. Identical nucleotides are marked with an asterisk beneath. Product melting temperatures (Tm) were estimated with Oligo 6 software, and while not identical to the melting curve generated by the SDS software, the relative differences in melt temperature between the buffalo and hamster products were similar for calculated and experimental values. Both methods indicated an approximate 2°C difference in Tm which was sufficient for discrimination by dissociation curve analysis.
Figure 4Sensitivity of qPCR method. Dissociation curve (A) and gel image (B) of RM151 in buffalo (BBU), hamster (A23) and selected RH clones. The left peak on the dissociation curve is presumed to be primer-dimer (~40 bp, as seen in the gel image), while the right peak is the target PCR product (barely visible or not at all in the gel image). This marker could not be scored by a gel-based method, but clones positive for buffalo DNA (#8, #22) are easily identified after dissociation curve analysis.
Figure 5Ambiguous qPCR typing of . Dissociation curve (A) and gel image (B) of AKT2 in buffalo (BBU), hamster (A23) and selected RH clones. Most "positive" clones (~90 bp target band present on gel) produced dissociation curves similar to the buffalo control (BBU, #94, #98) and most "negative" clones (target band absent on gel) produced dissociation curves similar to the hamster control (A23, #102); however, a number of clones produced intermediate or shifted dissociation curves that could not be scored convincingly (e.g. #104). Extraneous products and small target product size may have contributed to the variable dissociation curves for this marker.
Figure 6BBU. Markers in plain text were placed only on one map, and those in bold were placed on both maps. Markers in italics were binned and not given a specific map location.
Figure 7Amplification of hamster product reduces buffalo product peak size. Dissociation curve (A) and gel image (B) of CC530547 in buffalo (BBU), hamster (A23) and selected RH clones. Clone #38 produced a low, questionable peak on the dissociation curve, and unlike other positive clones (#30 and #39), exhibited the hamster band as well as the buffalo band in the gel.