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B. Why is RNA amplification
necessary?
Glass microarray
analysis experiments typically require 5-20 g of total RNA
per slide for sample labeling and hybridization. Thus,
microarray-based gene expression analysis of very small
samples [laser capture microdissection (LCM), tissue biopsies,
or other clinical samples] is difficult due to the very low
amounts of total RNA recovered from the samples. Linear
amplification of RNA from small samples produces sufficient
quantities of RNA for sample labeling and hybridization. Since
the amplification technique is highly reproducible and
maintains representation of the gene expression in the
original sample, it is recommended for probe synthesis by most
manufacturers of commercially available microarrays.
C. How do direct and indirect labeling of
aRNA differ?
Direct
labeling is incorporation of modified NTPs into
amplification products during the IVT step of the
amplification process. To make aRNA that is labeled with
fluorescent dyes, a mixture of dye-modified and unmodified (or
unlabeled) nucleotides are typically used in order to obtain
an optimal ratio of dye-labeled to unlabeled nucleotide for
maximal fluorescence. Usually ~200-400 M of dye-labeled CTP
is used with 1-3 mM unlabeled NTPs. Biotin-modified
nucleotides are incorporated fairly well with T7 RNA
polymerase. Ambion recommends using UTP:biotin-UTP ratios of
1:1 to 3:1. In general, labeled nucleotides are not
incorporated as efficiently as unlabeled molecules during
amplification, and therefore direct labeling does compromise
sample yield. Furthermore, if both Cy5 and Cy3 are used in a
direct labeling reaction, Cy5 is not incorporated as well as
Cy3, and corrections during data analysis are necessary to
adjust for this disparity.
Indirect labeling incorporates amino allyl UTP into amplification products during the IVT, and the amino allyl-modified aRNA produced is then chemically coupled to a detectable moiety such as a fluorescent dye or biotin. This method, though more time-consuming than direct labeling, can result in very highly labeled aRNA because amino allyl-modified UTP is incorporated very efficiently by T7 RNA polymerase.
D. What is the typical size range of
amplified RNA?
A single round
of amplification yields product sizes ranging from 200 bases
to 6 kb. The majority of these products are approximately 1.5
kb in length. A second round of amplification will result in
shorter products. We recommend using an Agilent 2100
bioanalyzer to visualize these products. Amplification
products can be visualized by agarose gel electrophoresis;
they will migrate as a smear. Although this data is still
useful, it is less informative than bioanalyzer analysis.
E. What is the typical probe orientation
for microarrays?
Oligonucleotides are single-stranded and
therefore only anneal to their complement. Probes for
microarrays are either generated from an RT reaction (cDNA) or
from linear amplification (aRNA). Both probe synthesis methods
generate antisense sequences. Most oligonucleotide arrays,
therefore, are designed with sequences in the sense
orientation.
