TY - JOUR
T1 - Non-biased and efficient global amplification of a single-cell cDNA library
AU - Huang, Huan
AU - Goto, Mari
AU - Tsunoda, Hiroyuki
AU - Sun, Lizhou
AU - Taniguchi, Kiyomi
AU - Matsunaga, Hiroko
AU - Kambara, Hideki
N1 - Funding Information:
Innovative Cell Biology by Innovative Technology (Cell Innovation Program) from Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT, in part); National Natural Science Foundation (NSFC) [21305069]. Funding for open access charge: MEXT.
PY - 2014/1/1
Y1 - 2014/1/1
N2 - Analysis of single-cell gene expression promises a more precise understanding of molecular mechanisms of a living system. Most techniques only allow studies of the expressions for limited numbers of gene species. When amplification of cDNA was carried out for analysing more genes, amplification biases were frequently reported. A non-biased and efficient global-amplification method, which uses a single-cell cDNA library immobilized on beads, was developed for analysing entire gene expressions for single cells. Every step in this analysis from reverse transcription to cDNA amplification was optimized. By removing degrading excess primers, the bias due to the digestion of cDNA was prevented. Since the residual reagents, which affect the efficiency of each subsequent reaction, could be removed by washing beads, the conditions for uniform and maximized amplification of cDNAs were achieved. The differences in the amplification rates for randomly selected eight genes were within 1.5-folds, which could be negligible for most of the applications of single-cell analysis. The global amplification gives a large amount of amplified cDNA (>100 μg) from a single cell (2-pg mRNA), and that amount is enough for downstream analysis. The proposed global-amplification method was used to analyse transcript ratios of multiple cDNA targets (from several copies to several thousand copies) quantitatively.
AB - Analysis of single-cell gene expression promises a more precise understanding of molecular mechanisms of a living system. Most techniques only allow studies of the expressions for limited numbers of gene species. When amplification of cDNA was carried out for analysing more genes, amplification biases were frequently reported. A non-biased and efficient global-amplification method, which uses a single-cell cDNA library immobilized on beads, was developed for analysing entire gene expressions for single cells. Every step in this analysis from reverse transcription to cDNA amplification was optimized. By removing degrading excess primers, the bias due to the digestion of cDNA was prevented. Since the residual reagents, which affect the efficiency of each subsequent reaction, could be removed by washing beads, the conditions for uniform and maximized amplification of cDNAs were achieved. The differences in the amplification rates for randomly selected eight genes were within 1.5-folds, which could be negligible for most of the applications of single-cell analysis. The global amplification gives a large amount of amplified cDNA (>100 μg) from a single cell (2-pg mRNA), and that amount is enough for downstream analysis. The proposed global-amplification method was used to analyse transcript ratios of multiple cDNA targets (from several copies to several thousand copies) quantitatively.
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U2 - 10.1093/nar/gkt965
DO - 10.1093/nar/gkt965
M3 - Article
C2 - 24141095
AN - SCOPUS:84893279703
SN - 0305-1048
VL - 42
JO - Nucleic Acids Research
JF - Nucleic Acids Research
IS - 2
M1 - e12
ER -