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Amplification of nonspecific products in quantitative polymerase chain reactions (qPCR)

Quantitative PCR allows the precise measurement of DNA concentrations and is generally considered to be straightforward and trouble free. However, a survey with 93 validated assays for genes in the Wnt-pathway showed that the amplification of nonspecific products occurs frequently and is unrelated t...

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Autores principales: Ruiz-Villalba, Adrián, van Pelt-Verkuil, Elizabeth, Gunst, Quinn D, Ruijter, Jan M, van den Hoff, Maurice JB
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5727009/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29255685
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bdq.2017.10.001
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author Ruiz-Villalba, Adrián
van Pelt-Verkuil, Elizabeth
Gunst, Quinn D
Ruijter, Jan M
van den Hoff, Maurice JB
author_facet Ruiz-Villalba, Adrián
van Pelt-Verkuil, Elizabeth
Gunst, Quinn D
Ruijter, Jan M
van den Hoff, Maurice JB
author_sort Ruiz-Villalba, Adrián
collection PubMed
description Quantitative PCR allows the precise measurement of DNA concentrations and is generally considered to be straightforward and trouble free. However, a survey with 93 validated assays for genes in the Wnt-pathway showed that the amplification of nonspecific products occurs frequently and is unrelated to C(q) or PCR efficiency values. Titration experiments showed that the occurrence of low and high melting temperature artifacts was shown to be determined by annealing temperature, primer concentration and cDNA input. To explore the range of input variations that occur in the normal use of the Cre assay these conditions were mimicked in a complete two-way design of template −plasmid DNA- and non-template −mouse cDNA- concentrations. These experiments showed that the frequency of the amplification of the correct product and the artifact, as well as the valid quantification of the correct product, depended on the concentration of the non-template cDNA. This finding questions the interpretation of dilution series in which template as well as non-template concentrations are simultaneously decreasing. Repetition of this cDNA concentration experiment with other templates revealed that exact reproduction qPCR experiments was affected by the time it takes to complete the pipetting of a qPCR plate. Long bench times were observed to lead to significantly more artifacts. However, the measurement of artifact-associated fluorescence can be avoided by inclusion of a small heating step after the elongation phase in the amplification protocol. Taken together, this trouble-shooting journey showed that reliability and reproducibility of qPCR experiments not only depends on standardization and reporting of the biochemistry and technical aspects but also on hitherto neglected factors as sample dilution and waiting times in the laboratory work flow.
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spelling pubmed-57270092017-12-18 Amplification of nonspecific products in quantitative polymerase chain reactions (qPCR) Ruiz-Villalba, Adrián van Pelt-Verkuil, Elizabeth Gunst, Quinn D Ruijter, Jan M van den Hoff, Maurice JB Biomol Detect Quantif Original Research Article Quantitative PCR allows the precise measurement of DNA concentrations and is generally considered to be straightforward and trouble free. However, a survey with 93 validated assays for genes in the Wnt-pathway showed that the amplification of nonspecific products occurs frequently and is unrelated to C(q) or PCR efficiency values. Titration experiments showed that the occurrence of low and high melting temperature artifacts was shown to be determined by annealing temperature, primer concentration and cDNA input. To explore the range of input variations that occur in the normal use of the Cre assay these conditions were mimicked in a complete two-way design of template −plasmid DNA- and non-template −mouse cDNA- concentrations. These experiments showed that the frequency of the amplification of the correct product and the artifact, as well as the valid quantification of the correct product, depended on the concentration of the non-template cDNA. This finding questions the interpretation of dilution series in which template as well as non-template concentrations are simultaneously decreasing. Repetition of this cDNA concentration experiment with other templates revealed that exact reproduction qPCR experiments was affected by the time it takes to complete the pipetting of a qPCR plate. Long bench times were observed to lead to significantly more artifacts. However, the measurement of artifact-associated fluorescence can be avoided by inclusion of a small heating step after the elongation phase in the amplification protocol. Taken together, this trouble-shooting journey showed that reliability and reproducibility of qPCR experiments not only depends on standardization and reporting of the biochemistry and technical aspects but also on hitherto neglected factors as sample dilution and waiting times in the laboratory work flow. Elsevier 2017-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5727009/ /pubmed/29255685 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bdq.2017.10.001 Text en © 2017 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Research Article
Ruiz-Villalba, Adrián
van Pelt-Verkuil, Elizabeth
Gunst, Quinn D
Ruijter, Jan M
van den Hoff, Maurice JB
Amplification of nonspecific products in quantitative polymerase chain reactions (qPCR)
title Amplification of nonspecific products in quantitative polymerase chain reactions (qPCR)
title_full Amplification of nonspecific products in quantitative polymerase chain reactions (qPCR)
title_fullStr Amplification of nonspecific products in quantitative polymerase chain reactions (qPCR)
title_full_unstemmed Amplification of nonspecific products in quantitative polymerase chain reactions (qPCR)
title_short Amplification of nonspecific products in quantitative polymerase chain reactions (qPCR)
title_sort amplification of nonspecific products in quantitative polymerase chain reactions (qpcr)
topic Original Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5727009/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29255685
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bdq.2017.10.001
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