| Literature DB >> 21235785 |
Wen-Han Yu1, Hedda Høvik, Ingar Olsen, Tsute Chen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With lower manufacturing cost, high spot density, and flexible probe design, genomic tiling microarrays are ideal for comprehensive transcriptome studies. Typically, transcriptome profiling using microarrays involves reverse transcription, which converts RNA to cDNA. The cDNA is then labeled and hybridized to the probes on the arrays, thus the RNA signals are detected indirectly. Reverse transcription is known to generate artifactual cDNA, in particular the synthesis of second-strand cDNA, leading to false discovery of antisense RNA. To address this issue, we have developed an effective method using RNA that is directly labeled, thus by-passing the cDNA generation. This paper describes this method and its application to the mapping of transcriptome profiles.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21235785 PMCID: PMC3031212 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2199-12-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Mol Biol ISSN: 1471-2199 Impact factor: 2.946
Figure 1Comparison of RNA- and cDNA-based hybridization signals. A: Histograms of log2 probe signal intensities obtained from the RNA-based (left panel) and cDNA-based method (right panel). Probe intensities from coding and non-coding regions highlighted red and blue, respectively. B: Scatter plots of signal intensities between those from the coding (x axis) and corresponding antisense (y axis) regions of the genome. RNA-based signals were plotted in the left panel and cDNA-based in the right.
Figure 2Comparison of RNA- and cDNA-based transcriptome profiles. Normalized log2 probe signal intensities (y axis) from a 100-kbp region of P. gingivalis genome were plotted on the genomic sequence coordinate (x axis) based on the positions of the probe sequences in the genome. The genomic positions of open reading frames (ORFs) within this region from both forward (orange boxes) and reverse (turquoise boxes) strands are shown in the middle of the figure. The gray dashed line in each of the four profiles represents the baseline. The regions highlighted in gray contain potential artifactual cDNA signals from the antisense strand of the corresponding ORF. The black bars labeled "A5/A5L PCR product" depict the positions and sizes of the expected strand-specific RT-PCR results referred to in Figure 3.
Figure 3Strand-specific RT-PCR targeting . Antisense sequences targeted by RT-PCR: PG0279, PG0933, PG1069, PG0559, and PG0775 (marked A1-5, respectively). A3L and A5L were longer PCR products from PG1069 and PG0775. C1, PG1159 and C2, PG1144 were sense sequences targeted by RT-PCR. Columns from left to right: 1, RT-PCR amplicons on RNA duplicates for the targeted antisense and sense sequences; 2, PCR of the targeted antisense and sense sequences on gDNA; 3, RT-PCR of the targeted antisense sequences without reverse transcriptase; 4, RT-PCR amplicons on RNA duplicates targeting the mutB gene; 5, RT-PCR of mutB without reverse transcriptase.