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Digital analysis of cDNA abundance; expression profiling by means of restriction fragment fingerprinting

BACKGROUND: Gene expression profiling among different tissues is of paramount interest in various areas of biomedical research. We have developed a novel method (DADA, Digital Analysis of cDNA Abundance), that calculates the relative abundance of genes in cDNA libraries. RESULTS: DADA is based upon...

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Autores principales: Hof, Peter, Ortmeier, Claudia, Pape, Kirstin, Reitmaier, Birgit, Regenbogen, Johannes, Goppelt, Andreas, Halle, Joern-Peter
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2002
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC99051/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11882253
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-3-7
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author Hof, Peter
Ortmeier, Claudia
Pape, Kirstin
Reitmaier, Birgit
Regenbogen, Johannes
Goppelt, Andreas
Halle, Joern-Peter
author_facet Hof, Peter
Ortmeier, Claudia
Pape, Kirstin
Reitmaier, Birgit
Regenbogen, Johannes
Goppelt, Andreas
Halle, Joern-Peter
author_sort Hof, Peter
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Gene expression profiling among different tissues is of paramount interest in various areas of biomedical research. We have developed a novel method (DADA, Digital Analysis of cDNA Abundance), that calculates the relative abundance of genes in cDNA libraries. RESULTS: DADA is based upon multiple restriction fragment length analysis of pools of clones from cDNA libraries and the identification of gene-specific restriction fingerprints in the resulting complex fragment mixtures. A specific cDNA cloning vector had to be constructed that governed missing or incomplete cDNA inserts which would generate misleading fingerprints in standard cloning vectors. Double stranded cDNA was synthesized using an anchored oligo dT primer, uni-directionally inserted into the DADA vector and cDNA libraries were constructed in E. coli. The cDNA fingerprints were generated in a PCR-free procedure that allows for parallel plasmid preparation, labeling, restriction digest and fragment separation of pools of 96 colonies each. This multiplexing significantly enhanced the throughput in comparison to sequence-based methods (e.g. EST approach). The data of the fragment mixtures were integrated into a relational database system and queried with fingerprints experimentally produced by analyzing single colonies. Due to limited predictability of the position of DNA fragments on the polyacrylamid gels of a given size, fingerprints derived solely from cDNA sequences were not accurate enough to be used for the analysis. We applied DADA to the analysis of gene expression profiles in a model for impaired wound healing (treatment of mice with dexamethasone). CONCLUSIONS: The method proved to be capable of identifying pharmacologically relevant target genes that had not been identified by other standard methods routinely used to find differentially expressed genes. Due to the above mentioned limited predictability of the fingerprints, the method was yet tested only with a limited number of experimentally determined fingerprints and was able to detect differences in gene expression of transcripts representing 0.05% of the total mRNA population (e.g. medium abundant gene transcripts).
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spelling pubmed-990512002-03-22 Digital analysis of cDNA abundance; expression profiling by means of restriction fragment fingerprinting Hof, Peter Ortmeier, Claudia Pape, Kirstin Reitmaier, Birgit Regenbogen, Johannes Goppelt, Andreas Halle, Joern-Peter BMC Genomics Methodology Article BACKGROUND: Gene expression profiling among different tissues is of paramount interest in various areas of biomedical research. We have developed a novel method (DADA, Digital Analysis of cDNA Abundance), that calculates the relative abundance of genes in cDNA libraries. RESULTS: DADA is based upon multiple restriction fragment length analysis of pools of clones from cDNA libraries and the identification of gene-specific restriction fingerprints in the resulting complex fragment mixtures. A specific cDNA cloning vector had to be constructed that governed missing or incomplete cDNA inserts which would generate misleading fingerprints in standard cloning vectors. Double stranded cDNA was synthesized using an anchored oligo dT primer, uni-directionally inserted into the DADA vector and cDNA libraries were constructed in E. coli. The cDNA fingerprints were generated in a PCR-free procedure that allows for parallel plasmid preparation, labeling, restriction digest and fragment separation of pools of 96 colonies each. This multiplexing significantly enhanced the throughput in comparison to sequence-based methods (e.g. EST approach). The data of the fragment mixtures were integrated into a relational database system and queried with fingerprints experimentally produced by analyzing single colonies. Due to limited predictability of the position of DNA fragments on the polyacrylamid gels of a given size, fingerprints derived solely from cDNA sequences were not accurate enough to be used for the analysis. We applied DADA to the analysis of gene expression profiles in a model for impaired wound healing (treatment of mice with dexamethasone). CONCLUSIONS: The method proved to be capable of identifying pharmacologically relevant target genes that had not been identified by other standard methods routinely used to find differentially expressed genes. Due to the above mentioned limited predictability of the fingerprints, the method was yet tested only with a limited number of experimentally determined fingerprints and was able to detect differences in gene expression of transcripts representing 0.05% of the total mRNA population (e.g. medium abundant gene transcripts). BioMed Central 2002-03-06 /pmc/articles/PMC99051/ /pubmed/11882253 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-3-7 Text en Copyright © 2002 Hof et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original URL.
spellingShingle Methodology Article
Hof, Peter
Ortmeier, Claudia
Pape, Kirstin
Reitmaier, Birgit
Regenbogen, Johannes
Goppelt, Andreas
Halle, Joern-Peter
Digital analysis of cDNA abundance; expression profiling by means of restriction fragment fingerprinting
title Digital analysis of cDNA abundance; expression profiling by means of restriction fragment fingerprinting
title_full Digital analysis of cDNA abundance; expression profiling by means of restriction fragment fingerprinting
title_fullStr Digital analysis of cDNA abundance; expression profiling by means of restriction fragment fingerprinting
title_full_unstemmed Digital analysis of cDNA abundance; expression profiling by means of restriction fragment fingerprinting
title_short Digital analysis of cDNA abundance; expression profiling by means of restriction fragment fingerprinting
title_sort digital analysis of cdna abundance; expression profiling by means of restriction fragment fingerprinting
topic Methodology Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC99051/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11882253
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-3-7
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