Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10771005 | Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
In the initial report, introducing a single phosphorothioate modification at the very 3â² terminus of the oligodeoxynucleotide primer has been shown to effectively protect the oligodeoxynucleotide degradation due to the 3â² exonuclease activity. In this study, we reported a novel finding that phosphorothioate modification at the 3â² end of primers could not only effectively prevent the primer from degradation, but could also mediate an off-switch extension by Pfu polymerase when primers also carry single or multiple mismatched bases located in the first eight bases of the 3â² terminus. This suggests that the combination of 3â² phosphorothioate-modified primers with exo+ polymerases such as Pfu constituted an on/off switch, which allows perfectly matched primers to be extended but not mismatched primers. Furthermore, we found that polymerases with different fidelities showed different efficiencies in turning off mismatched-primer mediated extension. So we described here a SYBR green-based real-time quantitative PCR assay for the detection of abundance level of gene expression that did not require fluorescently labeled gene-specific probes or complicated primer combinations. The emergence of real-time quantitative RT-PCR technology is thus suited for a diverse application with a need for high-throughput methods to detect and quantify different gene expressions by way of simplicity, versatility, and accuracy, and thus could complement global microarray-based expression profiling strategies.
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Authors
Hui-Ling Yang, Hu-Jun Jiang, Wei-Yi Fang, Yang-Yan Xu, Kai Li, Jia Zhang, Duan-Fang Liao, Fu-Chu He,