4.8 Article

Sensitive, multiplex and direct quantification of RNA sequences using a modified RASL assay

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 42, Issue 14, Pages 9146-9157

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gku636

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NIH-AI097548-02, 1KL2TR001112-01, U01 HG006476]
  2. Scripps Genomic Medicine, an National Institutes of Health-National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences Clinical and Translational Science Award [CTSA] [5 UL1 RR025774]
  3. NIH [AI097548, TR001112, HG006476]

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A sensitive and highly multiplex method to directly measure RNA sequence abundance without requiring reverse transcription would be of value for a number of biomedical applications, including high throughput small molecule screening, pathogen transcript detection and quantification of short/degraded RNAs. RNA Annealing, Selection and Ligation (RASL) assays, which are based on RNA template-dependent oligonucleotide probe ligation, have been developed to meet this need, but technical limitations have impeded their adoption. Whereas DNA ligase-based RASL assays suffer from extremely low and sequence-dependent ligation efficiencies that compromise assay robustness, Rnl2 can join a fully DNA donor probe to a 3'-diribonucleotide-terminated acceptor probe with high efficiency on an RNA template strand. Rnl2-based RASL exhibits sub-femtomolar transcript detection sensitivity, and permits the rational tuning of probe signals for optimal analysis by massively parallel DNA sequencing (RASL-seq). A streamlined Rnl2-based RASL-seq protocol was assessed in a small molecule screen using 77 probe sets designed to monitor complex human B cell phenotypes during antibody class switch recombination. Our data demonstrate the robustness, cost-efficiency and broad applicability of Rnl2-based RASL assays.

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