| Literature DB >> 24742004 |
Jenny Tomlinson1, Catherine Harrison, Neil Boonham, Sarah A Goodchild, Simon A Weller.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The performance of probes on an oligonucleotide microarray can be characterised in terms of hybridisation signal strength and the ability to discriminate sequence mismatches between the probe and the hybridising target strand, such as those resulting from SNPs. Various properties of the probe affect mismatch discrimination, such as probe length and the position of mismatched bases, and the effects of these factors have been well characterised in a variety of array formats.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24742004 PMCID: PMC3997201 DOI: 10.1186/1756-0500-7-251
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Probe sequences
| PM 1 | ACTACGACACACATGACATGATCAA |
| 5AA 1 | AC |
| MAA 1 | ACTACGACACACA |
| 3AA 1 | ACTACGACACACATGACATGA |
| 5AG 1 | ACTA |
| MAG 1 | ACTACGACACA |
| 3AG 1 | ACTACGACACACATGACATGAT |
| 5GG 1 | ACTA |
| MGG 1 | ACTACGACACA |
| 3GG 1 | ACTACGACACACATGACATGAT |
| 5CC 1 | ACTAC |
| MCC 1 | ACTACGACACACAT |
| 3CC 1 | ACTACGACACACATGACAT |
| 5 AC 1 | ACTAC |
| MAC 1 | ACTACGACACACAT |
| 3 AC 1 | ACTACGACACACATGACAT |
| 5CT 1 | ACTAC |
| MCT 1 | ACTACGACACACAT |
| 3CT 1 | ACTACGACACACATGACAT |
| 5TT 1 | ACT |
| MTT 1 | ACTACGACACAC |
| 3TT 1 | ACTACGACACACATGACATG |
| 5GT 1 | ACT |
| MGT 1 | ACTACGACACAC |
| 3GT 1 | ACTACGACACACATGACATG |
| PM 2 | ACGATATCCTCGAAAAGACGATCAA |
| 5AA 2 | ACGA |
| MAA 2 | ACGATATCC |
| 3AA 2 | ACGATATCCTCGAAAAGACGA |
| 5AG 2 | A |
| MAG 2 | ACGATATCCT |
| 3AG 2 | ACGATATCCTCGAAAAGACGAT |
| 5GG 2 | A |
| MGG 2 | ACGATATCCT |
| 3GG 2 | ACGATATCCTCGAAAAGACGAT |
| 5CC 2 | AC |
| MCC 2 | ACGATATCCTC |
| 3CC 2 | ACGATATCCTCGAAAAGAC |
| 5 AC 2 | AC |
| MAC 2 | ACGATATCCTC |
| 3 AC 2 | ACGATATCCTCGAAAAGAC |
| 5CT 2 | AC |
| MCT 2 | ACGATATCCTC |
| 3CT 2 | ACGATATCCTCGAAAAGAC |
| 5TT 2 | ACG |
| MTT 2 | ACGATATCCTCG |
| 3TT 2 | ACGATATCCTCGAAAAGACG |
| 5GT 2 | ACG |
| MGT 2 | ACGATATCCTCG |
| 3GT 2 | ACGATATCCTCGAAAAGACG |
Mismatched bases are indicated in bold.
Figure 1Illustration of the position of probes within PCR-amplified product. The section of the product overhanging the probe proximal to the array surface is referred to as the 5′ segment of the product, and the section overhanging the 5′ end of the probe is referred to as the 3′ segment of the product.
Primers used for biotin-labelled PCR
| for1 | CTGGAGGAGCCTTCCCTAC | rev1 | GTCGCGACTGCCGCTC | 94 | 43 |
| for2 | CCTCGCATTGCTCAAGCACA | rev1 | as above | 145 | 43 |
| for3 | CGCGACACGCCCATGT | rev1 | as above | 243 | 43 |
| for4 | GCGGACATCGACGGCTATGT | rev1 | as above | 312 | 43 |
| for4 lim* | AACGCGCGGACATCGACGGCTATGT | rev1 | as above | 317 | 43 |
| for5 | GCGCATACGATTCTTCAAAAGGC | rev1 | as above | 978 | 43 |
| for3 | as above | rev2 | ACGCCTTACGTATCGGATCG | 298 | 107 |
| for6 | CTTCGGGCCACCGCTACTA | rev3 | TGTGCTGTGGGCCGTGCT | 300 | 149 |
| for1 | as above | rev4 | TCACCGCGCCTTGCTCGT | 242 | 191 |
| for2 | as above | rev4 | as above | 293 | 191 |
| for3 | as above | rev4 | as above | 382 | 191 |
| for7 | as above | rev4 | as above | 624 | 191 |
| for5 | as above | rev4 | as above | 1126 | 191 |
| for1 | as above | rev5 | CCTCGGGCGTTTCGATCAC | 323 | 272 |
| for4 | as above | rev5 | as above | 541 | 272 |
| for8 | as above | rev5 | as above | 878 | 272 |
| for5 | as above | rev5 | as above | 1027 | 272 |
| for8 | CCAATGCATGTCGGCTCGC | rev6 | ACACCTCTTGCACGGAACCG | 296 | 23** |
| for9 | GACACAAGCCGCGAACTGAC | rev7 | CCCAATGTCCGACATAGCC | 295 | 95** |
| for10 | GAGCATCTTCGCGCCATAG | rev8 | TGTCGCGCTCGTTCGCTG | 289 | 149** |
| for7 | CCTTTGCCGTCAGCTTCCG | rev9 | TAGTAGCGGTGGCCCGAAG | 301 | 201** |
| for11 | CAGTTGTCCCTGAAGCGCCT | rev10 | TTGAGCAATGCGAGGCTGC | 317 | 246** |
*Modified for asymmetrical (Linear-After-The-Exponential) PCR.
**Probe set 2 – all other primer combinations for probe set 1.
Figure 2Array analysis of PCR products with similar overall length but different 5′ segment lengths: probe set 1. Panels show the signal intensity for perfect match and mismatch probes hybridised to PCR products with total lengths between 293 and 323 bases and 5′ segment lengths ranging from 43 to 272 bases; each panel shows the effect of a different mismatch at three positions within the probe. Approximately 1012 copies of PCR amplicon were applied to each array. Results shown are mean values for duplicate spots on the same array (error bars show standard deviation). 5AA = AA mismatch between probe and PCR product located in the 5′ third of the probe, etc.
Figure 3Array analysis of PCR products with similar overall length but different 5′ segment lengths: probe set 2. Panels show the signal intensity for perfect match and mismatch probes hybridised to PCR products with total lengths between 289 and 317 bases and 5′ segment lengths ranging from 23 to 246 bases; each panel shows the effect of a different mismatch at three positions within the probe. Approximately 1012 copies of PCR amplicon were applied to each array. Results shown are mean values for duplicate spots on the same array (error bars show standard deviation). 5AA = AA mismatch between probe and PCR product located in the 5′ third of the probe, etc.
Limit of detection of PCR products with similar total lengths but different 5′ segment lengths
| | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 312 | 43 | 0.63 ± 0.03 | 0.23 ± 0.03 | - |
| 323 | 272 | 0.62 ± 0.01 | 0.22 ± 0.02 | - |
| 296 | 23 | 0.66 ± 0.06 | 0.28 ± 0.05 | - |
| 317 | 246 | 0.57 ± 0.03 | 0.24 ± 0.00 | - |
*Results shown are mean values for duplicate spots on the same array; -: negative.
Figure 4Array analysis of PCR products with the same 5′ segment length but different total lengths. Arrays were hybridised with PCR products with constant 5′ segment lengths (A: 43 bases; B: 191 bases; C: 272 bases) but different overall lengths ranging from 94 to 978 bases, 242 to 1126 bases, and 323 to 1207 bases, respectively. Signal intensities were normalised relative to the signal for the perfect match probe on each array and are plotted against the 5′ segment length shown as a proportion of the total product length. Approximately 1012 copies of PCR amplicon were applied to each array. Results shown are mean values for duplicate spots on the same array (error bars show standard deviation). PM = perfect match probe. AA = AA mismatch between probe and PCR product, etc.
Figure 5Array analysis of symmetrical and asymmetrical PCR products. A. Signal intensity for hybridisation of symmetrical and asymmetrical PCR products of 312 and 317 bases, respectively, both with a 5′ segment length of 43 bases. Asymmetrical PCR was carried out using a forward primer modified for linear-after-the-exponential (LATE) PCR, with a primer ratio of 1:10. Approximately 500 ng total DNA (single-stranded plus double-stranded) was hybridised to each array. Results shown are mean values for duplicate spots on the same array. AA = AA mismatch between probe and PCR product, etc. B. Agarose gel electrophoresis of symmetrical and asymmetrical PCR products. The products of symmetrical and asymmetrical PCR were visualised by agarose gel electrophoresis with GelRed nucleic acid stain before and after treatment with S1 nuclease to confirm that the product of asymmetrical PCR contained single-stranded DNA (removed by S1 nuclease) as well as double-stranded DNA.