| Literature DB >> 29443017 |
Seyyed Hamidreza Hashemipetroudi1, Ghorbanali Nematzadeh1, Gholamreza Ahmadian2, Ahad Yamchi3, Markus Kuhlmann4.
Abstract
One method extensively used for the quantification of gene expression changes and transcript abundances is reverse-transcription quantitative real-time PCR (RT-qPCR). It provides accurate, sensitive, reliable, and reproducible results. Several factors can affect the sensitivity and specificity of RT-qPCR. Residual genomic DNA (gDNA) contaminating RNA samples is one of them. In gene expression analysis, non-specific amplification due to gDNA contamination will overestimate the abundance of transcript levels and can affect the RT-qPCR results. Generally, gDNA is detected by qRT-PCR using primer pairs annealing to intergenic regions or an intron of the gene of interest. Unfortunately, intron/exon annotations are not yet known for all genes from vertebrate, bacteria, protist, fungi, plant, and invertebrate metazoan species. Here we present a protocol for detection of gDNA contamination in RNA samples by using ribosomal DNA (rDNA)-based primers. The method is based on the unique features of rDNA: their multigene nature, highly conserved sequences, and high frequency in the genome. Also as a case study, a unique set of primers were designed based on the conserved region of ribosomal DNA (rDNA) in the Poaceae family. The universality of these primer pairs was tested by melt curve analysis and agarose gel electrophoresis. Although our method explains how rDNA-based primers can be applied for the gDNA contamination assay in the Poaceae family, it could be easily used to other prokaryote and eukaryote species.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29443017 PMCID: PMC5908672 DOI: 10.3791/55451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vis Exp ISSN: 1940-087X Impact factor: 1.355






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| SSU |
| 3701 | - | |
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| 3904 | |||
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| 3898 | - | ||
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| 4085 | - | ||
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| 3655 | CGTAACAAGGTTTCCGTAGGKG | ||
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| 110873 | - | No primer found | |
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| 3877 | - | ||
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| 4597 | - | ||
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| 4564 | - | ||
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| 4512 | - | ||
| LSU |
| 3701 | TGCTTAAACTCAGCGGGTAATC | |
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| 3904 | TGCTTAAATTCAGCGGGTAGCC | ||
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| 3898 | TGCTTAAATTCAGCGGGTAGCC | ||
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| 4085 | TGCTTAAACTCAGCGGGTAGTC | ||
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| 3655 | TGCTTAAACTCAGCGGGTAGTC | ||
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| 110873 | TGCTTAAATTCAGCGGGTAATC | ||
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| 3877 | TGCTTAAATTCAGCGGGTAGCC | ||
| TGCTTAAACTCAGCGGGTAGTC | ||||
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| 4597 | TGCTTAAACTCAGCGGGTAGTC | ||
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| 4564 | TGCTTAAACTCAGCGGGTAGTC | ||
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| 4512 | TGCTTAAACTCAGCGGGTAGTC | ||
| A degenerate primer is defined as IUPAC system for nucleotide nomenclature |
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| 332 - 405 bp | Partial sequence of SSU, whole sequence of ITS1 and partial sequence of 5.8S | CGTAACAAGGTTTCCGTAGGTG | SSU | ITS1-flanks |
| GGTTCACGGGATTCTGCAAT | 5.8S-R | |||
| 318 - 361 bp | Partial sequence of 5.8S, whole sequence of ITS2 and partial sequence of LSU | ATTGCAGAATCCCGTGAACC | 5.8S-F | ITS2-flanks |
| TGCTTAAAYTCAGCGGGTAGYC | LSU | |||
| 100 - 200 bp | ITS1 | GGTATGGCGTCAAGGAACACT | ITS1-F | ITS1 |
| ATAGCATCGCTGCAAGAGGT | ITS1-R |