| Literature DB >> 24376909 |
Andrew F Hill1, D Michiel Pegtel2, Ulrike Lambertz3, Tommaso Leonardi4, Lorraine O'Driscoll5, Stefano Pluchino6, Dmitry Ter-Ovanesyan7, Esther N M Nolte-'t Hoen8.
Abstract
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are the collective term for the various vesicles that are released by cells into the extracellular space. Such vesicles include exosomes and microvesicles, which vary by their size and/or protein and genetic cargo. With the discovery that EVs contain genetic material in the form of RNA (evRNA) has come the increased interest in these vesicles for their potential use as sources of disease biomarkers and potential therapeutic agents. Rapid developments in the availability of deep sequencing technologies have enabled the study of EV-related RNA in detail. In October 2012, the International Society for Extracellular Vesicles (ISEV) held a workshop on "evRNA analysis and bioinformatics." Here, we report the conclusions of one of the roundtable discussions where we discussed evRNA analysis technologies and provide some guidelines to researchers in the field to consider when performing such analysis.Entities:
Keywords: RNA; bioinformatics; deep sequencing; evRNA; extracellular vesicles
Year: 2013 PMID: 24376909 PMCID: PMC3873759 DOI: 10.3402/jev.v2i0.22859
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Extracell Vesicles ISSN: 2001-3078
Small-RNA-sequencing library preparation: most widely used library construction methods
| Method | Step 1 | Step 2 | Step 3 | Step 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Two double-stranded adapters that contain degenerate 5′- or 3′-end overhangs | Ligation adapters with T4 RNA ligase | Reverse transcription into cDNA | Further amplification by PCR using primers that anneal to both adapter sequences |
|
| Addition 3′ poly A tail using Poly (A) polymerase | Ligation RNA adapter to the 5′ end using T4 RNA ligase | Reverse transcription into cDNA | Further amplification by PCR |
|
| Addition 3′ poly A tail using Poly (A) polymerase | Reverse transcription into cDNA | Ligation adapter to the 5′ end using T4 RNA ligase 1 | Further amplification by PCR |
|
| Sequential ligation of 3′- and 5′-adapter oligonucleotides directly to small RNA | Ligation RNA adapter to the 5′ end using T4 RNA ligase | Reverse transcription into cDNA | Further amplification by PCR |
|
| Sequential ligation of 3′- and 5′-adapter oligonucleotides directly to small RNA | Reverse transcription into cDNA | Ligation adapter to the 5′ end using T4 RNA ligase 1 | Further amplification by PCR |
Parameters with regard to sRNA library preparation that should be considered
| Parameter | Effects to be considered | Approaches |
|---|---|---|
| RNA structures |
Some 5′- or 3′-end modifications of RNA sequences are not reactive or have reduced reactivity for enzymatic steps (adapter ligations) involved in library preparation. Sequences of small RNAs and their secondary and tertiary self-structures can affect the efficiency of 3′- and 5′-adapter ligation ( | Enzymatic treatments can be used to convert small RNAs of interest to have appropriate and homogenous ends in order to be ligated to adapters with good efficiency ( |
| RNA size distribution | Potential transcript length bias | Selection of small RNAs of specific sizes increases sequencing depth for sequences of interest. |
| Library construction method |
Different barcode sequences can influence the RNA and adapter cofold structures, which may cause changes in ligation efficiency ( Occurrence of adapter dimers | Use barcodes positioned in primers during library pre-amplification ( |
Checklist experimental details for publication
| Step | Parameters to be described |
|---|---|
| Cell culture | Cell type |
| EV isolation | Differential centrifugation steps |
| evRNA sample preparation | RNase/DNase treatment of EVs |
| Library preparation | Enzymatic treatment to remove phosphates, caps, etc. |
| Sequencing | Platform |
| Bioinformatics | Pre-processing software (trimming/clipping, cut-off values) |
| Validation | Validation technique |
| Deposition in database | Name of database |