| Literature DB >> 7514007 |
Abstract
The use of the storage phosphor imaging technique to quantitate radioactivity on blots generated by hybridization with 32P-cDNA probes was evaluated and compared with screen-enhanced x-ray film autoradiography. Quantitation of RNA dot blots hybridized with a 28S ribosomal RNA-specific cDNA probe showed that storage phosphor imaging was more sensitive than screen-enhanced x-ray film autoradiography in identifying low amounts of total RNA (1-10 micrograms). Evaluation of Northern blots containing 30 micrograms of total RNA from human skin biopsies hybridized with a cDNA probe for the human acidic ribosomal phosphoprotein, PO, showed that both techniques detected random biological variability of this housekeeping gene in a similar manner. The two techniques exhibited a strong linear correlation in their ability to quantitate mRNA levels of a retinoic acid-inducible gene (RIS-1). This correlation was stronger at levels corresponding to 1-fold to 30-fold increases of signal and decreased beyond this range because of the insensitivity of the x-ray film. In conclusion, storage phosphor imaging is more accurate than screen-enhanced x-ray film autoradiography in identifying different RNA amounts (higher sensitivity) and in detecting increasing RNA signals at high levels of radioactivity (higher dynamic range).Entities:
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Year: 1994 PMID: 7514007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechniques ISSN: 0736-6205 Impact factor: 1.993