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Measuring E. coli and bacteriophage DNA in cell sonicates to evaluate the CAL1 reaction as a synthetic biology standard for qPCR

We measured the impact of the presence of total Escherichia coli (E. coli) cellular material on the performance of the Linear Regression of Efficiency (LRE) method of absolute quantitative PCR (LRE qPCR), which features the putatively universal CAL1 calibration reaction, which we propose as a synthe...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Templar, Alexander, Schofield, Desmond M., Nesbeth, Darren N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5348119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28331815
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bdq.2016.12.001
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author Templar, Alexander
Schofield, Desmond M.
Nesbeth, Darren N.
author_facet Templar, Alexander
Schofield, Desmond M.
Nesbeth, Darren N.
author_sort Templar, Alexander
collection PubMed
description We measured the impact of the presence of total Escherichia coli (E. coli) cellular material on the performance of the Linear Regression of Efficiency (LRE) method of absolute quantitative PCR (LRE qPCR), which features the putatively universal CAL1 calibration reaction, which we propose as a synthetic biology standard. We firstly used a qPCR reaction in which a sequence present in the lone genomic BirA locus is amplified. Amplification efficiency for this reaction, a key metric for many quantitative qPCR methods, was inhibited by cellular material from bioreactor cultivation to a greater extent than material from shake flask cultivation. We then compared LRE qPCR to the Standard Curve method of absolute qPCR (SC qPCR). LRE qPCR method matched the performance of the SC qPCR when used to measure 417–4.17 × 10(7) copies of the BirA target sequence present in a shake flask-derived cell sonicates sample, and for 97–9.7 × 10(5) copies in the equivalent bioreactor-derived sample. A plasmid-encoded T7 bacteriophage sequence was next used to compare the methods. In the presence of cell sonicates from samples of up to OD(600) = 160, LRE qPCR outperformed SC qPCR in the range of 1.54 × 10(8)–1.54 × 10(10) copies of the T7 target sequence and matched SC qPCR over 1.54 × 10(4)–1.54 × 10(7) copies. These data suggest the CAL1 standard, combined with the LRE qPCR method, represents an attractive choice as a synthetic biology qPCR standard that performs well even when unpurified industrial samples are used as the source of template material.
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spelling pubmed-53481192017-03-22 Measuring E. coli and bacteriophage DNA in cell sonicates to evaluate the CAL1 reaction as a synthetic biology standard for qPCR Templar, Alexander Schofield, Desmond M. Nesbeth, Darren N. Biomol Detect Quantif Research Paper We measured the impact of the presence of total Escherichia coli (E. coli) cellular material on the performance of the Linear Regression of Efficiency (LRE) method of absolute quantitative PCR (LRE qPCR), which features the putatively universal CAL1 calibration reaction, which we propose as a synthetic biology standard. We firstly used a qPCR reaction in which a sequence present in the lone genomic BirA locus is amplified. Amplification efficiency for this reaction, a key metric for many quantitative qPCR methods, was inhibited by cellular material from bioreactor cultivation to a greater extent than material from shake flask cultivation. We then compared LRE qPCR to the Standard Curve method of absolute qPCR (SC qPCR). LRE qPCR method matched the performance of the SC qPCR when used to measure 417–4.17 × 10(7) copies of the BirA target sequence present in a shake flask-derived cell sonicates sample, and for 97–9.7 × 10(5) copies in the equivalent bioreactor-derived sample. A plasmid-encoded T7 bacteriophage sequence was next used to compare the methods. In the presence of cell sonicates from samples of up to OD(600) = 160, LRE qPCR outperformed SC qPCR in the range of 1.54 × 10(8)–1.54 × 10(10) copies of the T7 target sequence and matched SC qPCR over 1.54 × 10(4)–1.54 × 10(7) copies. These data suggest the CAL1 standard, combined with the LRE qPCR method, represents an attractive choice as a synthetic biology qPCR standard that performs well even when unpurified industrial samples are used as the source of template material. Elsevier 2016-12-29 /pmc/articles/PMC5348119/ /pubmed/28331815 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bdq.2016.12.001 Text en © 2016 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Templar, Alexander
Schofield, Desmond M.
Nesbeth, Darren N.
Measuring E. coli and bacteriophage DNA in cell sonicates to evaluate the CAL1 reaction as a synthetic biology standard for qPCR
title Measuring E. coli and bacteriophage DNA in cell sonicates to evaluate the CAL1 reaction as a synthetic biology standard for qPCR
title_full Measuring E. coli and bacteriophage DNA in cell sonicates to evaluate the CAL1 reaction as a synthetic biology standard for qPCR
title_fullStr Measuring E. coli and bacteriophage DNA in cell sonicates to evaluate the CAL1 reaction as a synthetic biology standard for qPCR
title_full_unstemmed Measuring E. coli and bacteriophage DNA in cell sonicates to evaluate the CAL1 reaction as a synthetic biology standard for qPCR
title_short Measuring E. coli and bacteriophage DNA in cell sonicates to evaluate the CAL1 reaction as a synthetic biology standard for qPCR
title_sort measuring e. coli and bacteriophage dna in cell sonicates to evaluate the cal1 reaction as a synthetic biology standard for qpcr
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5348119/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28331815
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bdq.2016.12.001
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