Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10536294 Analytical Biochemistry 2005 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
Adaptor-tagged competitive polymerase chain reaction (ATAC-PCR) is an advanced version of quantitative competitive PCR characterized by the addition of unique adaptors to different cDNA samples. It is currently the only quantitative PCR technique that enables large-scale gene expression analysis. Multiplex application of ATAC-PCR employs seven adaptors, two or three of which are used as controls to generate a calibration curve. The characteristics of the ATAC-PCR method for large-scale data production, including any adaptor- and gene-dependent amplification biases, were evaluated by using this method to analyze the expression of 384 mouse brain genes. Short adaptors tended to amplify at higher efficiency than did long adaptors. The population of genes with a high amplification bias increased with the use of short adaptors. Subtracting the median value of all adaptor-dependent biases could reduce this bias; the majority of genes displayed a small gene-dependent bias, which facilitated reliable quantification. We modified ATAC-PCR to estimate molecular numbers of transcripts by introducing synthetic standards. This modification demonstrated that gene expression levels in mammalian cells are varied over seven orders of magnitude.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
Authors
, , , , , , ,