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NEATTILL: A simplified procedure for nucleic acid extraction from arrayed tissue for TILLING and other high-throughput reverse genetic applications

BACKGROUND: TILLING (Targeting Induced Local Lesions in Genomes) is a reverse genetics procedure for identifying point mutations in selected gene(s) amplified from a mutagenized population using high-throughput detection platforms such as slab gel electrophoresis, capillary electrophoresis or dHPLC....

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Autores principales: Sreelakshmi, Yellamaraju, Gupta, Soni, Bodanapu, Reddaiah, Chauhan, Vineeta Singh, Hanjabam, Mickey, Thomas, Sherinmol, Mohan, Vijee, Sharma, Sulabha, Srinivasan, Rajeswari, Sharma, Rameshwar
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2828980/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20181012
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-4811-6-3
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author Sreelakshmi, Yellamaraju
Gupta, Soni
Bodanapu, Reddaiah
Chauhan, Vineeta Singh
Hanjabam, Mickey
Thomas, Sherinmol
Mohan, Vijee
Sharma, Sulabha
Srinivasan, Rajeswari
Sharma, Rameshwar
author_facet Sreelakshmi, Yellamaraju
Gupta, Soni
Bodanapu, Reddaiah
Chauhan, Vineeta Singh
Hanjabam, Mickey
Thomas, Sherinmol
Mohan, Vijee
Sharma, Sulabha
Srinivasan, Rajeswari
Sharma, Rameshwar
author_sort Sreelakshmi, Yellamaraju
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: TILLING (Targeting Induced Local Lesions in Genomes) is a reverse genetics procedure for identifying point mutations in selected gene(s) amplified from a mutagenized population using high-throughput detection platforms such as slab gel electrophoresis, capillary electrophoresis or dHPLC. One essential pre-requisite for TILLING is genomic DNA isolation from a large population for PCR amplification of selected target genes. It also requires multiplexing of genomic DNA isolated from different individuals (pooling) in typically 8-fold pools, for mutation scanning, and to minimize the number of PCR amplifications, which is a strenuous and long-drawn-out work. We describe here a simplified procedure of multiplexing, NEATTILL (Nucleic acid Extraction from Arrayed Tissue for TILLING), which is rapid and equally efficient in assisting mutation detection. RESULTS: The NEATTILL procedure was evaluated for the tomato TILLING platform and was found to be simpler and more efficient than previously available methods. The procedure consisted of pooling tissue samples, instead of nucleic acid, from individual plants in 96-well plates, followed by DNA isolation from the arrayed samples by a novel protocol. The three variants of the NEATTILL procedure (vast, in-depth and intermediate) can be applied across various genomes depending upon the population size of the TILLING platform. The 2-D pooling ensures the precise confirmation of the coordinates of the positive mutant line while scanning complementary plates. Choice of tissue for arraying and nucleic acid isolation is discussed in detail with reference to tomato. CONCLUSION: NEATTILL is a convenient procedure that can be applied to all organisms, the genomes of which have been mutagenized and are being scanned for multiple alleles of various genes by TILLING for understanding gene-to-phenotype relationships. It is a time-saving, less labour intensive and reasonably cost-effective method. Tissue arraying can cut costs by up to 90% and minimizes the risk of exposing the DNA to nucleases. Before arraying, different tissues should be evaluated for DNA quality, as the case study in tomato showed that cotyledons rather than leaves are better suited for DNA isolation. The protocol described here for nucleic acid isolation can be generally adapted for large-scale projects such as insertional mutagenesis, transgenic confirmation, mapping and fingerprinting which require isolation of DNA from large populations.
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spelling pubmed-28289802010-02-26 NEATTILL: A simplified procedure for nucleic acid extraction from arrayed tissue for TILLING and other high-throughput reverse genetic applications Sreelakshmi, Yellamaraju Gupta, Soni Bodanapu, Reddaiah Chauhan, Vineeta Singh Hanjabam, Mickey Thomas, Sherinmol Mohan, Vijee Sharma, Sulabha Srinivasan, Rajeswari Sharma, Rameshwar Plant Methods Methodology BACKGROUND: TILLING (Targeting Induced Local Lesions in Genomes) is a reverse genetics procedure for identifying point mutations in selected gene(s) amplified from a mutagenized population using high-throughput detection platforms such as slab gel electrophoresis, capillary electrophoresis or dHPLC. One essential pre-requisite for TILLING is genomic DNA isolation from a large population for PCR amplification of selected target genes. It also requires multiplexing of genomic DNA isolated from different individuals (pooling) in typically 8-fold pools, for mutation scanning, and to minimize the number of PCR amplifications, which is a strenuous and long-drawn-out work. We describe here a simplified procedure of multiplexing, NEATTILL (Nucleic acid Extraction from Arrayed Tissue for TILLING), which is rapid and equally efficient in assisting mutation detection. RESULTS: The NEATTILL procedure was evaluated for the tomato TILLING platform and was found to be simpler and more efficient than previously available methods. The procedure consisted of pooling tissue samples, instead of nucleic acid, from individual plants in 96-well plates, followed by DNA isolation from the arrayed samples by a novel protocol. The three variants of the NEATTILL procedure (vast, in-depth and intermediate) can be applied across various genomes depending upon the population size of the TILLING platform. The 2-D pooling ensures the precise confirmation of the coordinates of the positive mutant line while scanning complementary plates. Choice of tissue for arraying and nucleic acid isolation is discussed in detail with reference to tomato. CONCLUSION: NEATTILL is a convenient procedure that can be applied to all organisms, the genomes of which have been mutagenized and are being scanned for multiple alleles of various genes by TILLING for understanding gene-to-phenotype relationships. It is a time-saving, less labour intensive and reasonably cost-effective method. Tissue arraying can cut costs by up to 90% and minimizes the risk of exposing the DNA to nucleases. Before arraying, different tissues should be evaluated for DNA quality, as the case study in tomato showed that cotyledons rather than leaves are better suited for DNA isolation. The protocol described here for nucleic acid isolation can be generally adapted for large-scale projects such as insertional mutagenesis, transgenic confirmation, mapping and fingerprinting which require isolation of DNA from large populations. BioMed Central 2010-01-26 /pmc/articles/PMC2828980/ /pubmed/20181012 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-4811-6-3 Text en Copyright ©2010 Sreelakshmi et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Methodology
Sreelakshmi, Yellamaraju
Gupta, Soni
Bodanapu, Reddaiah
Chauhan, Vineeta Singh
Hanjabam, Mickey
Thomas, Sherinmol
Mohan, Vijee
Sharma, Sulabha
Srinivasan, Rajeswari
Sharma, Rameshwar
NEATTILL: A simplified procedure for nucleic acid extraction from arrayed tissue for TILLING and other high-throughput reverse genetic applications
title NEATTILL: A simplified procedure for nucleic acid extraction from arrayed tissue for TILLING and other high-throughput reverse genetic applications
title_full NEATTILL: A simplified procedure for nucleic acid extraction from arrayed tissue for TILLING and other high-throughput reverse genetic applications
title_fullStr NEATTILL: A simplified procedure for nucleic acid extraction from arrayed tissue for TILLING and other high-throughput reverse genetic applications
title_full_unstemmed NEATTILL: A simplified procedure for nucleic acid extraction from arrayed tissue for TILLING and other high-throughput reverse genetic applications
title_short NEATTILL: A simplified procedure for nucleic acid extraction from arrayed tissue for TILLING and other high-throughput reverse genetic applications
title_sort neattill: a simplified procedure for nucleic acid extraction from arrayed tissue for tilling and other high-throughput reverse genetic applications
topic Methodology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2828980/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20181012
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1746-4811-6-3
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