| Literature DB >> 23227988 |
Victoria A Vandernoot1, Stanley A Langevin, Owen D Solberg, Pamela D Lane, Deanna J Curtis, Zachary W Bent, Kelly P Williams, Kamlesh D Patel, Joseph S Schoeniger, Steven S Branda, Todd W Lane.
Abstract
Second-generation sequencing (SGS) has become the preferred method for RNA transcriptome profiling of organisms and single cells. However, SGS analysis of transcriptome diversity (including protein-coding transcripts and regulatory non-coding RNAs) is inefficient unless the sample of interest is first depleted of nucleic acids derived from ribosomal RNA (rRNA), which typically account for up to 95% of total intracellular RNA content. Here we describe a novel microscale hydroxyapatite chromatography (HAC) normalization method to remove eukaryotic and prokaryotic high abundant rRNA species, thereby increasing sequence coverage depth and transcript diversity across non-rRNA populations. RNA-seq analysis of Escherichia coli K-12 and human intracellular total RNA showed that HAC-based normalization enriched for all non-ribosomal RNA species regardless of RNA transcript abundance or length when compared with untreated controls. Microcolumn HAC normalization generated rRNA-depleted cDNA libraries comparable to the well-established duplex specific nuclease (DSN) normalization and Ribo-Zero rRNA-depletion methods, thus establishing microscale HAC as an effective, cost saving, and non-destructive alternative normalization technique.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23227988 DOI: 10.2144/000113937
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechniques ISSN: 0736-6205 Impact factor: 1.993