| Literature DB >> 26052342 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: High-throughput primer design is routinely performed in a wide number of molecular applications including genotyping specimens using traditional PCR techniques as well as assembly PCR, nested PCR, and primer walking experiments. Batch primer design is also required in validation experiments from RNA-seq transcriptome sequencing projects, as well as in generating probes for microarray experiments. The growing popularity of next generation sequencing and microarray technology has created a greater need for more primer design tools to validate large numbers of candidate genes and markers.Entities:
Keywords: Genotyping; NGS; PCR; Perl; Primer design; Sequencing
Year: 2015 PMID: 26052342 PMCID: PMC4456780 DOI: 10.1186/s13029-015-0038-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Source Code Biol Med ISSN: 1751-0473
Fig. 1Screen-shot of the graphical outputs generated by PrimerView. a PrimerView designs primers for datasets of any size and generates a JPEG format file of the alignment for each primer illustrating its position on the target sequence. The user inputted sequence name (derived from the FASTA description line) is shown as well as the base pair positions and location of the designed primer. b A PNG file is also generated by PrimerView that maps the distribution of all designed primers onto the scaled target sequence. The target sequence is represented by a number line that equates to nucleotide position. The gene name is indicated above the number line and the name of each primer is represented by its starting position in nucleotides
Fig. 2Testing and validation of PrimerView. a Performance testing of PrimerView. Files containing different numbers of sequences (10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 400, 1000, 20,284 – obtained from WormBase ftp site: ftp://ftp.wormbase.org/pub/wormbase/) were provided as input to PrimerView and ran using default settings to generate PNG file primer distribution outputs. Fitting the relationship between sequence number and run-time with a quadratic equation yields an R2 value of 1.00. b Comparison of primer T values between PrimerView with Primer3 [10]. To perform these tests only the calcTm subroutine within PrimerView was called for 400 primers designed using Primer3 [10]. A robust correlation (R2 value of 0.97) was observed between each method, both of which employ nearest-neighbour parameter sets. c Specificity and orientation of primers returned using PrimerView was tested using the MFE-Primer 2.0 in silico PCR tool (http://biocompute.bmi.ac.cn/CZlab/MFEprimer-2.0/) [11, 12]. Sample output from one test showing the sequence file (NC_003284.7) in FASTA format, and displaying all sequence matches in the database that lie between and include the primer pair (Seq2 and Seq1). The FASTA header details the region in the database as well as the primers; the body of the FASTA sequence is capitalized in areas where the primer sequence matches the database sequence and in lower-case elsewhere