WO1991015601A1 - Modified rna template-specific polymerase chain reaction - Google Patents

Modified rna template-specific polymerase chain reaction Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1991015601A1
WO1991015601A1 PCT/US1991/002211 US9102211W WO9115601A1 WO 1991015601 A1 WO1991015601 A1 WO 1991015601A1 US 9102211 W US9102211 W US 9102211W WO 9115601 A1 WO9115601 A1 WO 9115601A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
sequence
dna
pcr
segment
primer
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1991/002211
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Alan R. Shuldiner
Jesse Roth
Original Assignee
The United States Of America, As Represented By The Secretary, U.S. Department Of Commerce
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by The United States Of America, As Represented By The Secretary, U.S. Department Of Commerce filed Critical The United States Of America, As Represented By The Secretary, U.S. Department Of Commerce
Priority to AU76536/91A priority Critical patent/AU7653691A/en
Publication of WO1991015601A1 publication Critical patent/WO1991015601A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12QMEASURING OR TESTING PROCESSES INVOLVING ENZYMES, NUCLEIC ACIDS OR MICROORGANISMS; COMPOSITIONS OR TEST PAPERS THEREFOR; PROCESSES OF PREPARING SUCH COMPOSITIONS; CONDITION-RESPONSIVE CONTROL IN MICROBIOLOGICAL OR ENZYMOLOGICAL PROCESSES
    • C12Q1/00Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions
    • C12Q1/68Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions involving nucleic acids
    • C12Q1/6844Nucleic acid amplification reactions
    • C12Q1/6848Nucleic acid amplification reactions characterised by the means for preventing contamination or increasing the specificity or sensitivity of an amplification reaction
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12QMEASURING OR TESTING PROCESSES INVOLVING ENZYMES, NUCLEIC ACIDS OR MICROORGANISMS; COMPOSITIONS OR TEST PAPERS THEREFOR; PROCESSES OF PREPARING SUCH COMPOSITIONS; CONDITION-RESPONSIVE CONTROL IN MICROBIOLOGICAL OR ENZYMOLOGICAL PROCESSES
    • C12Q1/00Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions
    • C12Q1/68Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions involving nucleic acids
    • C12Q1/6844Nucleic acid amplification reactions
    • C12Q1/6853Nucleic acid amplification reactions using modified primers or templates

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a method for detecting an RNA sequence. More specifically, the present invention relates to a method of amplifying an RNA sequence using a modification of the polymerase chain reaction.
  • PCR polymerase chain reaction
  • this technique When coupled with reverse transcription (RT-PCR) , this technique can detect as few as 1 to 100 copies of a specific RNA from single cells or small numbers of cells. [Kawasaki et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 85, 5698 (1988); Rappolee et al., Science 241, 708 (1988); Rappolee et al., Science 241, 1823 (1988); Sarkar et al., Science 244, 331 (1988); and Froh an et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 85, 8998 (1988)]. Unfortunately, the extraordinar sensitivity of this technique presents one of its severe shortcomings, false positives resulting from contamination with minute quantities of DNA [Kwok et al.. Nature 339, 237 (1989); Sakar et al.. Nature 343, 27 (1989)].
  • Potential sources of contaminating DNA may include:
  • exogenous sources such as cDNA, plasmid DNA, or DNA fragments amplified in previous PCRs (i.e. carryover) .
  • RT-PCR was recently used to detect small quantities of Xenopus insulin mRNAs in unfertilized eggs and early embryos.
  • numerous precautions were taken to exclude contamination of Xenopus insulin cDNAs which had been previously cloned in our laboratory [Shuldiner et al., J. Biol. Chem. 264,9428 (1989)], frequent false positives precluded meaningful ⁇ interpretation of the experiments.
  • RNA template-specific PCR and modified RS-PCR, provides methods of detecting minute quantities of RNA without the problems of false positives associated with RT-PCR.
  • RS-PCR RNA template-specific PCR
  • modified RS-PCR provides methods of detecting minute quantities of RNA without the problems of false positives associated with RT-PCR.
  • the reduction in the frequency of false positives is achieved without sacrificing sensitivity obtained with conventional RT-PCR.
  • RNA sequence which reduces the number of false positives resulting from DNA contamination in the sample (i.e., previously cloned cDNAs, genomic DNA or carryover of DNA amplified in previous PCRs) .
  • the present method increases the accuracy of the procedure without sacrificing sensitivity.
  • the present invention relates to a method of detecting an RNA sequence.
  • the method comprises: i) reverse transcribing the RNA sequence from an oligonucleotide primer hybridized thereto which oligonucleotide primer (d 17 -t 30 ) comprises: a) on the 3 1 end thereof (segment d 17 ) , a nucleotide sequence complementary to a region of the RNA sequence to be detected; and b) on the 5* end thereof (segment t 30 ) , a unique random nucleotide sequence or tag whereby a single stranded DNA sequence is produced which has at its 5' end the unique sequence; ii) hybridizing, at a temperature high enough to preclude annealing of the d 17 segment of the d ⁇ 7 -t 30 primer to possible contaminating DNA, but low enough to allow annealing, an upstream oligonucleotide primer (U 30 ) , to a region of said DNA sequence
  • FIGURE 1 shows diagrammatically the RNA template-specific PCR method (RS-PCR) .
  • FIGURE 2 compares the sensitivity of conventional reverse transcriptase - PCR (RT-PCR) and novel RS-PCR when beginning with an RNA template.
  • FIGURE 3 compares conventional RT-PCR and novel RS-PCR when DNA rather than RNA is used as a starting template to mimic DNA contamination.
  • FIGURE 4 shows the effect of changing the nucleotide sequence of the unique segment of oligonucleotide primer d 2 o _ 2 i•
  • FIGURE 5 shows schematically the modified RNA template-specific PCR.
  • FIGURE 6 compares conventional RT-PCR and modified RS-PCR.
  • RT primer d 7t 30 PCR primers t 30 and u 30 (lanes 1-4)
  • RT primer d 30 t PCR primers d 30 and u 30 (lanes 6-9) .
  • Lane 0 is a Haelll digest of PhiX174 DNA, while lane 5 is RS-PCR in the absence of any template.
  • FIGURE 7 shows PCR carryover contamination is ignored with modified RS-PCR. Lanes 1 and 3; RT primer d 17 -t 30 , PCR primers u 30 and t 30 . Lanes 2 and 4; RT primer d 16 t' 30 , PCR primers u 30 and t' 30 .
  • FIGURE 8 shows the region of Xenopus insulin RNA that was used as the target RNA to test the modified RS-PCR procedure.
  • Reverse transcription primer d 17 -t 3 o contained a 17 base sequence at its 3' end (segment d 17 ) that was complementary (antisense) to a region of Xenopus insulin RNA in the 3' untranslated region (nucleotides 404-420), and 30 bases at its 5 1 end (segment t 30 ) that were unique in sequence.
  • Upstream primer u 30 is identical (sense) to Xenopus insulin RNA in the coding region (nucleotides 59-88) .
  • RNA template-specific PCR and modified RS-PCR, relates to a targeted amplification method which distinguishes RNA in the sample from contaminating DNA and amplifies only sequences derived from RNA. Minute quantities of cDNA, plasmid DNA or carryover DNA amplified in previous PCRs can be important sources of contamination when using conventional RT-PCR.
  • the present invention reduces the number of false positives obtained as a result of contaminating DNA.
  • the present invention obviates the necessity of choosing a target RNA sequence which spans an intron in order to distinguish the reverse transcribed DNA from contaminating genomic DNA.
  • the modified RS-PCR eliminates the need for removal of the primer after reverse transcription, such as by ultrafiltration.
  • a first oligonucleotide primer designated d 20 -t 21 in Figure 1 (advantageously, of about 41 nucleotides) is hybridized to the RNA sequence to be detected.
  • Primer d 2 o-t 2 ⁇ comprises on the 3• end, a nucleotide sequence (advantageously, about 20 nucleotides) complementary to the 3 1 end of the RNA sequence whose presence is to be detected (segment d 2 o) and on the 5' end, a unique random nucleotide sequence or tag (advantageously, about 21 nucleotides) (segment t 2 ) . While the 3 1 end of the primer hybridizes to the RNA sequence, the 5' end of the primer remains unhybridized as no complementary sequence exists within the sample.
  • primer d 20 -t 2 has been hybridized to the 3 1 end of the RNA sequence, reverse transcriptase is used to extend the primer.
  • the resulting single -(-) stranded DNA segment is thus tagged at its 5' end with the unique sequence t 21 of original primer d 20 -t 21 .
  • This unique 5' sequence (t 21 ) distinguishes between DNA generated from the RNA-template and possible contaminating DNA. It is preferable for the unique sequence to be composed of approximately equal amounts of each nucleotide (i.e. about 25% of each nucleotide) .
  • sequence which is unlikely to have significant secondary structure, and does not contain significant complementarity at its 3• end with the 3' end of the upstream primer (for example, primer u 2 ⁇ ) .
  • the sequence can also, be selected so as to contain a convenient restriction enzyme recognition site if desired.
  • One skilled in the art can easily generate by computer appropriate sequences, 5•-GACAAGCTTCAGGTAATCGAT-3' and 5*-CCGAATTCTGTAGTCCGTCA-3* being two examples.
  • excess primer d 20 -t 21 is removed by ultrafiltration through a Centricon 100 device (Amicon, Danvers, MA) or similar device.
  • the DNA segment resulting from the previous step is amplified using the PCR technique (see U.S. Patents 4,683,202 and 4,683,195).
  • Two oligonucleotide primers designated u 21 and t 21 in Figure 1 are utilized to amplify the DNA.
  • Upstream oligonucleotide primer u 21 (advantageously, about 21 nucleotides) comprises a nucleotide sequence complementary the single stranded DNA segment produced in Step 1, a predetermined distance upstream from primer d 20 t 21 .
  • Oligonucleotide primer t 2 ⁇ (advantageously, about 21 nucleotides) comprises the unique nucleotide sequence with which the segment of DNA was tagged during reverse transcription. The two primers are added to the sample and the PCR is carried out.
  • primer u 21 which is complementary to a region of the single stranded DNA segment produced in Step 1, a predetermined distance upstream from primer d 20 t 21 , hybridizes thereto and is extended therefrom creating a complementary strand of DNA which includes at its 3• end a sequence complementary to the unique sequence.
  • Primer t 21 is not utilized in the first PCR cycle since no complementary sequence is present in the sample.
  • primer t 2 ⁇ is used in the second PCR cycle and all cycles thereafter.
  • the double stranded DNA segment resulting from the first PCR cycle is denatured prior to the second PCR cycle.
  • primer u 2 ⁇ which is complementary to the 3 1 end of the single - (-) stranded DNA hybridizes thereto and is extended therefrom.
  • primer t 21 hybridizes to its complementary sequence at the 3 ' end of the single - (+) strand of DNA and is extended therefrom. All DNA synthesis occurs in the 5 1 to 3' direction.
  • the modified RS-PCR method of the present invention is shown schematically in Figure 5.
  • the modified RS-PCR method eliminates the need to remove the first oligonucleotide primer, designated d 7 -t 30 in Figure 5, by selecting oligonucleotide primers d 17 -t 30 , t 30 and d 30 , so that differential hydridization occurs under the PCR conditions.
  • the primers are selected so that the d 7 -t 30 primer and the d 30 and the t 30 primers anneal under different temperatures.
  • a first oligonucleotide primer designated d 17 -t 30 in Figure 5 (advantageously, of about 47 nucleotides) is hybridized to the RNA sequence to be detected.
  • Primer d 17 -t 30 comprises on the 3' end, a nucleotide sequence (advantageously, about 17 nucleotides) complementary to the 3' end of the RNA sequence whose presence is to be detected (segment d ⁇ 7 ) , and on the 5* end, a unique random nucleotide sequence or tag (advantageously, about 30 nucleotides) (segment t 30 ) .
  • the primer should be selected so that the length of the d segment is such that it will not anneal efficiently to any DNA contaminants at the elevated annealing temperatures used in Steps 2 and 3.
  • One skilled in the art can easily generate by computer suitable d 17 -t 3 o primers including, for example, 5 1 - gaacatcgatgacaagcttaggtatcgatatgatggaattgccttga-3' and 5*-cttatacggatatcctggcaattcggacttgcatgatggaattgcc-3' .
  • reverse transcriptase is used to extend the primer thereby creating a single -(-) stranded DNA segment which is tagged at its 5* end with the unique sequence, the t 30 segment, of original primer.
  • This unique 5 1 sequence as with the RS-PCR method, distinguishes between DNA generated from the RNA- template and possible contaminating DNA.
  • oligonucleotide primer designated u 30 in Figure 5 hybridizes to the single stranded DNA generated in Step 1 a predetermined distance upstream from primer d 17 -t 30 , and is extended therefrom creating a complementary strand of DNA which includes at its 3* end a sequence complementary to the unique sequence.
  • the primer u 30 comprises a nucleotide sequence complementary to the single stranded DNA segment produced in Step 1, a predetermined distance upstream from primer d 17 t 30 .
  • the annealing stage of the PCR cycle is carried out at a temperature high enough to preclude annealing of the d 17 segment of the reverse transcription primer d 7 -t 30 a to contaminating DNA, but low enough to allow annealing of PCR primer u 30 , for example temperatures of 42" C or greater.
  • the double stranded DNA segment resulting from the first PCR cycle is denatured prior to the second PCR cycle.
  • primer u 3 o which is complementary to the single - (-) stranded DNA hybridizes thereto and is extended therefrom.
  • a second oligonucleotide primer designated t 30 in Figure 5 (advantageously, about 30 nucleotides) is added to the sample.
  • the primer t 30 comprises the unique nucleotide sequence with which the segment of DNA was tagged during reverse transcription. When the primer is added to the sample it hybridizes to its complementary sequence at the 3 1 end of the single - (+) strand of DNA and is extended therefrom.
  • the annealing stage of all PCR cycles is conducted at a temperature high enough to preclude annealing of the d 17 segment of the reverse transcription primer d 17 -t 30 a to contaminating DNA, but low enough to allow annealing of PCR primers u 3 o and t 30 .
  • RS-PCR sequences derived from RNA that are tagged with the unique sequence (t 30 ) during reverse transcription (step 1) are amplified preferentially during PCR (steps 2 and 3) .
  • the original RS-PCR method requires ultrafiltration after reverse transcription to remove excess RT primer [Shuldiner et al.. Gene 91, 139 (1990) ] .
  • the modified RS-PCR cirumvents this step by increasing the length of the RT and PCR primers, and increasing the PCR annealing temperature.
  • the primers are selected so that the RT primer, d 17 -t 3 o, hybridizes to the RNA template under the reverse transcription conditions but does not hybridize to possible DNA contaminants under the PCR conditions.
  • the longer length of the u 30 and t 30 primers allows annealing to occur at an increased temperature, that is temperatures up to about 72" C. Annealing of the 17 base d 7 segment of the RT primer d 17 -t 30 occurs efficiently during reverse transcription at 37°C, but not at the higher PCR annealing temperature. Thus, when Steps 2 and 3 are carried out at a temperature of 42" C or greater (preferably 65° or greater), remaining d 17 -t 30 primer does not anneal to possible DNA contaminants while the u 30 and t 30 primers will anneal and be extended.
  • each cycle of PCR involves primer hybridization, extension to yield double stranded DNA and denaturation.
  • both the (+) and (-) strands of the DNA serve as templates from which a new strand of DNA is created. This leads to logarithmic expansion of the tagged segment of DNA.
  • Contaminating DNA lacks the unique nucleotide sequence.
  • the 3* end of the single - (-) strand of DNA serves as a template for primer u 21 or u 30 (but the 3' end of the -(+) strand can not act as template for unique primer t 2 ⁇ or t 3 o since there is no complementary sequence) .
  • This allows only linear amplification which, as one skilled in the art knows, does not produce enough DNA to result in a false positive when detecting the presence of the logarithmically amplified PCR product.
  • the criteria for selecting the unique sequence of the primer used for reverse transcription and subsequent PCR is that the sequence selected is not present in the sample i.e. is unique. Therefore, the sequence used can be changed periodically. Changing the unique sequence prevents amplification of carryover PCR products.
  • the methods of the present invention are particularly useful in a clinical laboratory setting where many samples and automation make careful laboratory hygiene more difficult.
  • the present invention is as sensitive as the well known PCR and RT-PCR procedures. Therefore, the small quantity of RNA needed is not affected. However, the present invention has the advantage of being more accurate.
  • a segment of Xenopus insulin RNA is amplified by the present methods. The methods are applicable to the amplification of other RNAs.
  • RNA Template-Specific Polymerase Chain Reaction Xenopus insulin mRNA was amplified using novel RS-PCR, which involves first reverse transcribing Xenopus pancreatic RNA using an oligonucleotide 41-mer as a primer (oligonucleotide d 2 o-t 2 ⁇ ) whose nucleotide sequence contained 20-bases at the 3*-end which were complementary to a region of Xenopus insulin mRNA (segment d 20 ) , and 21-bases at the 5*-end which consisted of a unique random sequence selected by computer or similar method (segment t 21 ) (FIGURE 1) followed by PCR amplification of the DNA segment.
  • oligonucleotide 41-mer oligonucleotide d 2 o-t 2 ⁇
  • RNA from Xenopus pancreatic tissue was prepared by the guanidinium isothiocyanate method [Chirgwin et al.. Biochemistry 18, 5294 (1979)].
  • RNA was reverse transcribed at 42"C for one hour in a 25 ⁇ l reaction mixture containing Tris-HCl (50 mM, pH adjusted to 8.7 at room temperature) , NaCl (100 mM) , MgCl 2 (6 mM) , dithiothreitol (10 mM) , dNTP's (1 mM each), RNasin (1 ⁇ l; Promega Biotec; Madison, WI) , oligonucleotide d 20 - t 21 (5•-GACAAGCTTCAGGTATCGATTTGCATGATGGAATTGCCTTG-3 » ; 0.5 ⁇ M) , and AMV-reverse transcriptase (10 units; Promega Biotec) .
  • oligonucleotide primer d 20 -t 21 was efficiently removed (>99.9%) using a Centricon 100 ultrafiltration device (Amicon; Danvers, MA) according to manufacturer's recommendations. Then PCR was performed using as primers oligonucleotide t 21 , a 21-mer containing the same unique nucleotide sequence as in segment t 21 of oligonucleotide d 20 -t 2 ⁇ and oligonucleotide u 21 , a 21-mer complementary to the first strand, 244 bp upstream from oligonucleotide 2 ⁇ « PCR amplification was performed in a 50 ⁇ l reaction volume containing Tris-HCl (10 mM, pH adjusted to 8.3 at room temperature), KC1 (50 mM) , MgCl 2 (1.5 mM), gelatin (0.01%), dNTP's (200 ⁇ M each), oligonucleotide t 21
  • the reaction mixture was covered with paraffin oil (approximately 50 ⁇ l) , heated to 94"C for 5 minutes, followed by PCR (45-60 cycles). Each cycle consisted of annealing (55'C, 1.5 min) , extension (72"C, 1.5 min) and denaturation (94"C, 1 min) except for the last cycle, in which the extension time was increased to 15 minutes to insure completeness of extension. Twenty microliters of the reaction mixtures were loaded onto a composite gel consisting of 1% agarose and 2% Nusieve GTG (FMC Bioproducts; Rockland, ME) in Tris-borate-EDTA buffer, electrophoresed, stained with ethidium bromide, and visualized by UV transillumination.
  • paraffin oil approximately 50 ⁇ l
  • PCR 45-60 cycles. Each cycle consisted of annealing (55'C, 1.5 min) , extension (72"C, 1.5 min) and denaturation (94"C, 1 min) except for the last cycle, in which the extension
  • RNA which had been reverse transcribed with oligonucleotide d 20 - t 21 and ultrafiltered, was subjected to either conventional RT-PCR (oligonucleotides d 20 and u 21 ) , or novel RS-PCR (oligonucleotides t 21 and u 21 ) .
  • PCR with either of these two oligonucleotide pairs resulted in similar sensitivity (FIGURE 2) .
  • Xenopus pancreatic RNA (1 ng) was reverse transcribed and ultrafiltered according to the methods of Example 1.
  • Example 3 Comparison of novel RS-PCR and conventional RT-PCR using a DNA template
  • novel RS-PCR was approximately 10 to 1000-fold less affected by the presence of DNA contaminants (i.e., Xenopus insulin cDNA) than conventional RT-PCR even after 60 cycles (FIGURE 3) .
  • Full-length Xenopus insulin cDNA (300 pg) was "reverse transcribed" with oligonucleotide d 20 -t 21 , excess oligonucleotide d 20 -t 2 ⁇ removed by ultrafiltration, and PCR (60 cycles) was accomplished as described in the above Examples.
  • Results of the conventional RT-PCR performed on serial ten-fold dilutions of the "reverse transcribed" and ultrafiltered Xenopus insulin cDNA using oligonucleotides d 20 and u 21 is shown in FIGURE 3, lanes 1-5.
  • Novel RS-PCR of identical serial ten-fold dilutions of "reverse transcribed" and ultrafiltered Xenopus insulin cDNA using oligonucleotides t 21 and u 21 is shown in lanes 6-10 of the same figure.
  • RNA that had been primed with oligonucleotide d 2 o-t 21 during RT should have been amplified during PCR.
  • detectable amplification was observed (lane 6 in Fig. 3) .
  • Example 4 Effect of changing the sequence of the unique segment t 2. of oligonucleotide d 20 - t 21 on conventional RT-PCR and novel RS- PCR.
  • oligonucleotide d 20 - t 21 on conventional RT-PCR and novel RS- PCR.
  • Xenopus pancreatic RNA (1 ng) was reversed transcribed with either oligonucleotide 41-mer d 20 -t 21 (FIGURE 4, lanes 1, 2, 3 and 7), or oligonucleotide 41- mer d 20 -t' 21 (5 » - CCGAATTCTGTAGTCCGTCATTGCAGATGGAATTGCCTTG-3•) (FIGURE 4, lanes 4-6) .
  • PCR 45 cycles was accomplished as described in the previous Examples using oligonucleotide pairs t 21 and u 21 (FIGURE 4, lanes 1 and 4), t' 21 (5'-CCGAATTCTGTAGTCCGTCA-3') and u 21 (FIGURE 4, lanes 2 and 5), d 20 and u 21 (FIGURE 4, lanes 3 and 6), or t 21 and u' 21 (5'-TGACCTTTCCAGCACTTATC-3') (FIGURE 4, lane 7) .
  • RNA that had been reversed transcribed with oligonucleotide d 20 -t 21 was amplified only when oligonucleotide t 21 was used during PCR, but not when an unrelated unique 21-mer (oligonucleotide t' 21 ) was used.
  • reverse transcription of Xenopus pancreatic RNA with oligonucleotide d 20 -t' 21 could only be amplified by the corresponding unique 21- mer, oligonucleotide t' 21 , and not by the unrelated random 21-mer, oligonucleotide t 21 .
  • oligonucleotide d 20 reverse transcription of Xenopus pancreatic RNA with oligonucleotide d 20 -t' 21
  • Oligonucleotides were synthesized on a Coder 300 automated DNA synthesizer (E.I. Du Pont Company;
  • Xenopus insulin (sense) RNA was prepared by ligating an 890 bp Xenopus insulin cDNA [Shuldiner et al., J. Biol. Chem. 264, 9428 (1989)] into pSP71 (Promega Biotec; Madison, WI) .
  • RNA polymerase Promega Biotec
  • T7 RNA polymerase was used for in vitro transcription to generate Xenopus insulin (sense) RNA.
  • the RNA was purified by oligo-dT cellulose chromatography (Bethesda Research Laboratories) . Only full-length RNA was retained by the column since the 3' end contained a long poly-A tail. The RNA was quantitated by UV absorbance at 260 nm. RNA was diluted to the appropriate concentration in water containing yeast tRNA (100 ⁇ g/ml) (Bethesda Research Laboratories) .
  • DNA templates used to demonstrate RNA specificity were either a double-stranded 890 bp Xenopus insulin cDNA insert [Shuldiner et al., J. Biol. Chem. 264, 9428 (1989)], or a 377 bp Xenopus insulin RS-PCR product that had been subjected to ultrafiltration with a Millipore-MC-100 device (Millipore; Bedford, MA) to remove excess primers. DNA templates were quantitated by comparison to a known quantity of a Haelll digest of PhiX174 (Bethesda Research Laboratories) after agarose gel electrophoresis.
  • Reverse transcription of serial ten-fold dilutions of Xenopus insulin RNA (10 7 to 10 4 copies) was accomplished at 37° C in a final volume of 20 ⁇ l containing KC1 (50 mM) , Tris-HCl (10 mM; pH 8.3 at 25" C) , MgCl 2 (1.5 mM) , gelatin (0.01 mg/ml), dNTPs (200 ⁇ M each) , RNasin (40 U; Promega Biotec) , AMV- reverse transcriptase (7 U; Promega Biotec) , and primer.d 17 -t 30 (0.5 ⁇ M) .
  • Primer d 17 -t 30 (Table I) was a 47-mer whose sequence contained 17 bases at its 3•-end that were complementary to a region of Xenopus insulin mRNA, designated segment d 17 , and 30 bases at its 5'-end that were unique in sequence, designated segment t 30 .
  • reverse transcription yields single-stranded DNA that contains a unique 30 base "tag" (segment t 30 ) at its 5 « end (FIGURE 5).
  • the second strand was synthesized during the first cycle of PCR in which 5 ⁇ l of the RT reaction mixture from step 1 was used directly in a final volume of 50 ⁇ l containing KC1 (50 mM) , Tris-HCl (10 mM; pH 8.3 at 25° C) , MgCl 2 (1.5 mM) , gelatin (0.01 mg/ml), dNTPs (200 ⁇ M each), upstream primer u 30 (0.5 ⁇ M) , downstream primer t 30 (0.5 ⁇ M) and Taq polymerase (1.5 U; Perkin Elmer-Cetus; Emeryville, CA) .
  • KC1 50 mM
  • Tris-HCl 10 mM; pH 8.3 at 25° C
  • MgCl 2 1.5 mM
  • gelatin 0.01 mg/ml
  • dNTPs 200 ⁇ M each
  • upstream primer u 30 0.5 ⁇ M
  • downstream primer t 30 0.5 ⁇ M
  • Upstream (sense) primer u 30 was a 30-mer corresponding to Xenopus insulin cDNA that was 347 bp upstream from the sequence corresponding to segment d ⁇ 7 , while downstream primer t 30 was a 30-mer whose sequence was identical to segment t 30 of RT primer d 17 -t 30 (see Table I) .
  • sequences derived from RNA that had been tagged with unique sequence (t 30 ) during reverse transcription were amplified logarithmically preferentially, while contaminating DNAs, lacking the unique tag, were not amplified logarithmically (FIGURE 5) [Shuldiner et al.. Gene 91, 139 (1990)].
  • PCR reaction mixture After covering the PCR reaction mixture with parafin oil (approximately 50 ⁇ l) , 35 cycles of PCR were performed, each cycle consisting of denaturation (94° C, 1 mih) and annealing/extension (70° C, 2 min) . In the first cycle, the denaturation time was increased to 5 min, and in the last cycle, the annealing/extension time was increased to 10 min to ensure completeness of the extension.
  • PCR reaction mixture Twenty microliters of the PCR reaction mixture was electrophoresed on a composite gel consisting of 1% agarose (Bethesda Research Laboratories) and 2% Nuseive GTG (FMC Bioproducts; Rockland, ME) . DNA was visualized by ethidium bromide staining and UV transillumination.
  • Example 6 Comparison of modified RS-PCR and conventional RT-PCR To compare the sensitivity of modified RS-PCR to conventional RT-PCR, serial ten-fold dilutions of Xenopus insulin RNA (10 7 to 10 4 molecules) were amplified using either modified RS-PCR (RT primer d 17 -t 30 ; PCR primers u 30 and t 30 ) (FIGURE 6, panel a, lanes 1-5) , or conventional RT-PCR (RT primer d 30 ; PCR primers u 30 and d 30 ) (FIGURE 6, panel a, lanes 6-
  • Modified RS-PCR was equally sensitive to conventional RT-PCR when beginning with an RNA template.
  • conventional RT-PCR resulted, as expected, in a strong signal (FIGURE 6, panel b, lane 11)
  • the modified RS-PCR method virtually ignored theDNA template (FIGURE 6, panel b, lane 10) .
  • larger amounts of DNA i.e., > 10 8 copies
  • a faint signal was detected with RS-PCR [Shuldiner et al.. Gene 91, 139 (1990)].
  • PCR was performed with two 377 bp Xenopus insulin RS- PCR products (approximately 10 8 copies) that were identical to each other except each contained a different unique tag (sequence t 30 or t' 30 (Table I and FIGURE 7) .

Abstract

The present invention relates to methods of detecting an RNA sequence by tagging the sequence with a unique random nucleotide sequence during reverse transcription. The unique nucleotide sequence is then utilized to selectively amplify the resulting DNA sequence. The present invention reduces the number of false positives obtained as a result of contaminating DNA.

Description

MODIFIED RNA TEMPLATE-SPECIFIC POLYMERASE CHAIN REACTION The present application is a continuation-in- part application of Serial No. 07/504,591 filed April 5, 1990, which is hereby incorporated in its entirety.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method for detecting an RNA sequence. More specifically, the present invention relates to a method of amplifying an RNA sequence using a modification of the polymerase chain reaction.
2. Background Information
The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method, developed by Perkin-Elmer-Cetus Corporation, is a popular and extraordinarily powerful technique for the amplification of DNA sequences. It has wide-ranging applications including molecular biology, medical diagnostics, genetics, forensics, and archeology [Saiki et al., Science 230, 1350 (1985); Saiki et al., Science 239, 487 (1985); Kogan et al., N. Engl. J. Med. 316, 656 (1987); Higuchi et al., Nature 332, 543 (1988); and Paabo et al., J. Biol. Chem. 264, 9709 (1989)]. When coupled with reverse transcription (RT-PCR) , this technique can detect as few as 1 to 100 copies of a specific RNA from single cells or small numbers of cells. [Kawasaki et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 85, 5698 (1988); Rappolee et al., Science 241, 708 (1988); Rappolee et al., Science 241, 1823 (1988); Sarkar et al., Science 244, 331 (1988); and Froh an et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 85, 8998 (1988)]. Unfortunately, the exquisite sensitivity of this technique presents one of its severe shortcomings, false positives resulting from contamination with minute quantities of DNA [Kwok et al.. Nature 339, 237 (1989); Sakar et al.. Nature 343, 27 (1989)].
Potential sources of contaminating DNA may include:
1) endogenous sources such as small quantities of genomic DNA which may copurify with RNA, and
2) exogenous sources such as cDNA, plasmid DNA, or DNA fragments amplified in previous PCRs (i.e. carryover) .
While the frequency of false positives can be reduced somewhat by instituting and maintaining special techniques (e.g. premixing and aliquoting reagents; use of disposable gloves and positive displacement pipettes; and adding the experimental sample last) , contamination still remains a major problem, especially when low abundance RNA transcripts are being sought [Kwok et al., Nature 339, 237 (1989); Lo, Y.-M., et al.. Lancet 2, 699 (1988)]. Conventional RT-PCR amplifies equally well DNA derived from an RNA template or from a DNA template. Therefore, small quantities of contaminating DNA from virtually any source may easily result in false positives. Assuming approximately 4 pg of genomic DNA per mammalian haploid cell, and a sensitivity of 1 to 100 copies, conventional RT-PCR would result in false positives from only picogram quantities of contaminating genomic DNA.
It is possible to avoid false positives caused by amplification of genomic DNA which may copurify with RNA if the target sequence to be amplified by RT-PCR spans an intron. However, this experimental design is not always possible since 1) some genes do not contain introns in convenient regions, and 2) the genomic structure of many target genes are not yet known.
In the laboratory of the present inventors, RT-PCR was recently used to detect small quantities of Xenopus insulin mRNAs in unfertilized eggs and early embryos. Despite the fact that numerous precautions were taken to exclude contamination of Xenopus insulin cDNAs which had been previously cloned in our laboratory [Shuldiner et al., J. Biol. Chem. 264,9428 (1989)], frequent false positives precluded meaningful ■ interpretation of the experiments.
The present invention, RNA template-specific PCR (RS-PCR) and modified RS-PCR, provides methods of detecting minute quantities of RNA without the problems of false positives associated with RT-PCR. In the present methods the reduction in the frequency of false positives is achieved without sacrificing sensitivity obtained with conventional RT-PCR. SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a method of detecting an RNA sequence which reduces the number of false positives resulting from DNA contamination in the sample (i.e., previously cloned cDNAs, genomic DNA or carryover of DNA amplified in previous PCRs) . The present method increases the accuracy of the procedure without sacrificing sensitivity.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a method of detecting an RNA sequence which obviates the necessity to choose a target RNA sequence which spans an intron. Various other objects and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following description of the invention and the drawings.
In one embodiment, the present invention relates to a method of detecting an RNA sequence. The method comprises: i) reverse transcribing the RNA sequence from an oligonucleotide primer hybridized thereto which oligonucleotide primer (d17-t30) comprises: a) on the 31 end thereof (segment d17) , a nucleotide sequence complementary to a region of the RNA sequence to be detected; and b) on the 5* end thereof (segment t30) , a unique random nucleotide sequence or tag whereby a single stranded DNA sequence is produced which has at its 5' end the unique sequence; ii) hybridizing, at a temperature high enough to preclude annealing of the d17 segment of the dι7-t30 primer to possible contaminating DNA, but low enough to allow annealing, an upstream oligonucleotide primer (U30) , to a region of said DNA sequence to which it is complementary, a predetermined distance upstream from soi iii) extending the primer (u30) so that a DNA molecule is produced having at its 3* end a nucleotide sequence complementary to said unique nucleotide sequence (segment t30) ; iv) denaturing the double-stranded DNA molecule produced in step (iii) ; v) hybridizing, at a temperature high enough to preclude annealing of the d17 segment of the d17-t30 primer to possible contaminating DNA, but low enough to allow annealing the upstream PCR oligonucleotide primer (u30) to the region of said DNA sequence to which it is complementary and, hybridizing, at a temperature high enough to preclude annealing of the d17 segment of the d17-t30 primer to possible contaminating DNA, but low enough to allow annealing of a PCR oligonucleotide primer (t30) comprising all or a portion of said unique nucleotide sequence, to the 31 end of said DNA sequence to which it is complementary; vi) extending the primers (u30) and (t30) thereby producing two DNA molecules; and vii) detecting the presence or absence of the amplified DNA sequence; wherein the d17 segment of the oligonucleotide primer d17-t30 does not hybridize to contaminating DNA at the annealing temperature of the PCR, and oligonucleotide primer u30 and oligonucleotide primer t30 do hybridize to their appropriate DNA templates at the annealing temperature of the PCR.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIGURE 1 shows diagrammatically the RNA template-specific PCR method (RS-PCR) .
FIGURE 2 compares the sensitivity of conventional reverse transcriptase - PCR (RT-PCR) and novel RS-PCR when beginning with an RNA template.
FIGURE 3 compares conventional RT-PCR and novel RS-PCR when DNA rather than RNA is used as a starting template to mimic DNA contamination. FIGURE 4 shows the effect of changing the nucleotide sequence of the unique segment of oligonucleotide primer d2o_ 2i• FIGURE 5 shows schematically the modified RNA template-specific PCR.
FIGURE 6 compares conventional RT-PCR and modified RS-PCR. RT primer d7t30: PCR primers t30 and u30 (lanes 1-4) ; RT primer d30t: PCR primers d30 and u30 (lanes 6-9) . Lane 0 is a Haelll digest of PhiX174 DNA, while lane 5 is RS-PCR in the absence of any template. FIGURE 7 shows PCR carryover contamination is ignored with modified RS-PCR. Lanes 1 and 3; RT primer d17-t30, PCR primers u30 and t30. Lanes 2 and 4; RT primer d16t'30, PCR primers u30 and t'30.
FIGURE 8 shows the region of Xenopus insulin RNA that was used as the target RNA to test the modified RS-PCR procedure. Reverse transcription primer d17-t3o contained a 17 base sequence at its 3' end (segment d17) that was complementary (antisense) to a region of Xenopus insulin RNA in the 3' untranslated region (nucleotides 404-420), and 30 bases at its 51 end (segment t30) that were unique in sequence. Upstream primer u30 is identical (sense) to Xenopus insulin RNA in the coding region (nucleotides 59-88) . DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION The present invention, RNA template-specific PCR (RS-PCR) and modified RS-PCR, relates to a targeted amplification method which distinguishes RNA in the sample from contaminating DNA and amplifies only sequences derived from RNA. Minute quantities of cDNA, plasmid DNA or carryover DNA amplified in previous PCRs can be important sources of contamination when using conventional RT-PCR. The present invention reduces the number of false positives obtained as a result of contaminating DNA. Furthermore, the present invention obviates the necessity of choosing a target RNA sequence which spans an intron in order to distinguish the reverse transcribed DNA from contaminating genomic DNA. In addition, the modified RS-PCR eliminates the need for removal of the primer after reverse transcription, such as by ultrafiltration.
The RS-PCR method of the present invention is shown schematically in Figure 1.
In the first step, a first oligonucleotide primer designated d20-t21 in Figure 1 (advantageously, of about 41 nucleotides) is hybridized to the RNA sequence to be detected. Primer d2o-t2ι comprises on the 3• end, a nucleotide sequence (advantageously, about 20 nucleotides) complementary to the 31 end of the RNA sequence whose presence is to be detected (segment d2o) and on the 5' end, a unique random nucleotide sequence or tag (advantageously, about 21 nucleotides) (segment t2 ) . While the 31 end of the primer hybridizes to the RNA sequence, the 5' end of the primer remains unhybridized as no complementary sequence exists within the sample.
Once primer d20-t2 has been hybridized to the 31 end of the RNA sequence, reverse transcriptase is used to extend the primer. The resulting single -(-) stranded DNA segment is thus tagged at its 5' end with the unique sequence t21 of original primer d20-t21. This unique 5' sequence (t21) distinguishes between DNA generated from the RNA-template and possible contaminating DNA. It is preferable for the unique sequence to be composed of approximately equal amounts of each nucleotide (i.e. about 25% of each nucleotide) . Furthermore, it is preferable to choose a unique sequence which is unlikely to have significant secondary structure, and does not contain significant complementarity at its 3• end with the 3' end of the upstream primer (for example, primer u2ι) . The sequence can also, be selected so as to contain a convenient restriction enzyme recognition site if desired. One skilled in the art can easily generate by computer appropriate sequences, 5•-GACAAGCTTCAGGTAATCGAT-3' and 5*-CCGAATTCTGTAGTCCGTCA-3* being two examples.
Prior to amplification, excess primer d20-t21 is removed by ultrafiltration through a Centricon 100 device (Amicon, Danvers, MA) or similar device.
In the second and third steps of the present method, the DNA segment resulting from the previous step is amplified using the PCR technique (see U.S. Patents 4,683,202 and 4,683,195). Two oligonucleotide primers designated u21 and t21 in Figure 1 are utilized to amplify the DNA. Upstream oligonucleotide primer u21 (advantageously, about 21 nucleotides) comprises a nucleotide sequence complementary the single stranded DNA segment produced in Step 1, a predetermined distance upstream from primer d20t21. Oligonucleotide primer t2ι (advantageously, about 21 nucleotides) comprises the unique nucleotide sequence with which the segment of DNA was tagged during reverse transcription. The two primers are added to the sample and the PCR is carried out.
In the second step of the present method (PCR cycle 1), primer u21, which is complementary to a region of the single stranded DNA segment produced in Step 1, a predetermined distance upstream from primer d20t21, hybridizes thereto and is extended therefrom creating a complementary strand of DNA which includes at its 3• end a sequence complementary to the unique sequence. Primer t21 is not utilized in the first PCR cycle since no complementary sequence is present in the sample. However, primer t2ι is used in the second PCR cycle and all cycles thereafter.
In the third step of the present method, the double stranded DNA segment resulting from the first PCR cycle, is denatured prior to the second PCR cycle. For the second cycle and all subsequent PCR •cycles, primer u2ι which is complementary to the 31 end of the single - (-) stranded DNA hybridizes thereto and is extended therefrom. At the same time, the primer t21 hybridizes to its complementary sequence at the 3 ' end of the single - (+) strand of DNA and is extended therefrom. All DNA synthesis occurs in the 51 to 3' direction.
The modified RS-PCR method of the present invention is shown schematically in Figure 5.
The modified RS-PCR method eliminates the need to remove the first oligonucleotide primer, designated d7-t30 in Figure 5, by selecting oligonucleotide primers d17-t30, t30 and d30, so that differential hydridization occurs under the PCR conditions. The primers are selected so that the d7-t30 primer and the d30 and the t30 primers anneal under different temperatures.
In the first step, as with the RS-PCR method, a first oligonucleotide primer designated d17-t30 in Figure 5 (advantageously, of about 47 nucleotides) is hybridized to the RNA sequence to be detected. Primer d17-t30 comprises on the 3' end, a nucleotide sequence (advantageously, about 17 nucleotides) complementary to the 3' end of the RNA sequence whose presence is to be detected (segment dι7) , and on the 5* end, a unique random nucleotide sequence or tag (advantageously, about 30 nucleotides) (segment t30) .
The primer should be selected so that the length of the d segment is such that it will not anneal efficiently to any DNA contaminants at the elevated annealing temperatures used in Steps 2 and 3. One skilled in the art can easily generate by computer suitable d17-t3o primers including, for example, 51- gaacatcgatgacaagcttaggtatcgatatgatggaattgccttga-3' and 5*-cttatacggatatcctggcaattcggacttgcatgatggaattgcc-3' . Once primer dι7-t30 has been hybridized to the RNA sequence, reverse transcriptase is used to extend the primer thereby creating a single -(-) stranded DNA segment which is tagged at its 5* end with the unique sequence, the t30 segment, of original primer. This unique 51 sequence, as with the RS-PCR method, distinguishes between DNA generated from the RNA- template and possible contaminating DNA.
In the second step of the present method (PCR cycle 1) , oligonucleotide primer designated u30 in Figure 5 (advantageously, about 30 nucleotides) hybridizes to the single stranded DNA generated in Step 1 a predetermined distance upstream from primer d17-t30, and is extended therefrom creating a complementary strand of DNA which includes at its 3* end a sequence complementary to the unique sequence. The primer u30 comprises a nucleotide sequence complementary to the single stranded DNA segment produced in Step 1, a predetermined distance upstream from primer d17t30. The annealing stage of the PCR cycle is carried out at a temperature high enough to preclude annealing of the d17 segment of the reverse transcription primer d7-t30 a to contaminating DNA, but low enough to allow annealing of PCR primer u30, for example temperatures of 42" C or greater.
In the third step of the present method, the double stranded DNA segment resulting from the first PCR cycle, is denatured prior to the second PCR cycle. For the second cycle and all subsequent cycles, primer u3o which is complementary to the single - (-) stranded DNA hybridizes thereto and is extended therefrom. At the same time, a second oligonucleotide primer, designated t30 in Figure 5 (advantageously, about 30 nucleotides) is added to the sample. The primer t30 comprises the unique nucleotide sequence with which the segment of DNA was tagged during reverse transcription. When the primer is added to the sample it hybridizes to its complementary sequence at the 31 end of the single - (+) strand of DNA and is extended therefrom. The annealing stage of all PCR cycles is conducted at a temperature high enough to preclude annealing of the d17 segment of the reverse transcription primer d17-t30 a to contaminating DNA, but low enough to allow annealing of PCR primers u3o and t30.
With RS-PCR, sequences derived from RNA that are tagged with the unique sequence (t30) during reverse transcription (step 1) are amplified preferentially during PCR (steps 2 and 3) . The original RS-PCR method requires ultrafiltration after reverse transcription to remove excess RT primer [Shuldiner et al.. Gene 91, 139 (1990) ] . The modified RS-PCR cirumvents this step by increasing the length of the RT and PCR primers, and increasing the PCR annealing temperature. The primers are selected so that the RT primer, d17-t3o, hybridizes to the RNA template under the reverse transcription conditions but does not hybridize to possible DNA contaminants under the PCR conditions.
The longer length of the u30 and t30 primers allows annealing to occur at an increased temperature, that is temperatures up to about 72" C. Annealing of the 17 base d7 segment of the RT primer d17-t30 occurs efficiently during reverse transcription at 37°C, but not at the higher PCR annealing temperature. Thus, when Steps 2 and 3 are carried out at a temperature of 42" C or greater (preferably 65° or greater), remaining d17-t30 primer does not anneal to possible DNA contaminants while the u30 and t30 primers will anneal and be extended.
In both RS-PCR methods described above, each cycle of PCR involves primer hybridization, extension to yield double stranded DNA and denaturation. After the first PCR cycle, both the (+) and (-) strands of the DNA serve as templates from which a new strand of DNA is created. This leads to logarithmic expansion of the tagged segment of DNA.
Contaminating DNA lacks the unique nucleotide sequence. Thus, during the PCR the 3* end of the single - (-) strand of DNA serves as a template for primer u21 or u30 (but the 3' end of the -(+) strand can not act as template for unique primer t2ι or t3o since there is no complementary sequence) . This allows only linear amplification which, as one skilled in the art knows, does not produce enough DNA to result in a false positive when detecting the presence of the logarithmically amplified PCR product.
Potential contamination arising from carryover of PCR products from previous experiments in which a different unique sequence was used is virtually eliminated when the present invention is used. With the methods of the present invention, no false positives were observed in over 20 independent experiments. The criteria for selecting the unique sequence of the primer used for reverse transcription and subsequent PCR is that the sequence selected is not present in the sample i.e. is unique. Therefore, the sequence used can be changed periodically. Changing the unique sequence prevents amplification of carryover PCR products. Thus, the methods of the present invention are particularly useful in a clinical laboratory setting where many samples and automation make careful laboratory hygiene more difficult. The present invention is as sensitive as the well known PCR and RT-PCR procedures. Therefore, the small quantity of RNA needed is not affected. However, the present invention has the advantage of being more accurate. In the following non-limiting examples, a segment of Xenopus insulin RNA is amplified by the present methods. The methods are applicable to the amplification of other RNAs.
Examples RS-PCR
Example 1: RNA Template-Specific Polymerase Chain Reaction (RS-PCR) Xenopus insulin mRNA was amplified using novel RS-PCR, which involves first reverse transcribing Xenopus pancreatic RNA using an oligonucleotide 41-mer as a primer (oligonucleotide d2o-t2ι) whose nucleotide sequence contained 20-bases at the 3*-end which were complementary to a region of Xenopus insulin mRNA (segment d20) , and 21-bases at the 5*-end which consisted of a unique random sequence selected by computer or similar method (segment t21) (FIGURE 1) followed by PCR amplification of the DNA segment. As a first step, total RNA from Xenopus pancreatic tissue was prepared by the guanidinium isothiocyanate method [Chirgwin et al.. Biochemistry 18, 5294 (1979)]. RNA was reverse transcribed at 42"C for one hour in a 25 μl reaction mixture containing Tris-HCl (50 mM, pH adjusted to 8.7 at room temperature) , NaCl (100 mM) , MgCl2 (6 mM) , dithiothreitol (10 mM) , dNTP's (1 mM each), RNasin (1 μl; Promega Biotec; Madison, WI) , oligonucleotide d20- t21 (5•-GACAAGCTTCAGGTATCGATTTGCATGATGGAATTGCCTTG-3» ; 0.5 μM) , and AMV-reverse transcriptase (10 units; Promega Biotec) .
This reverse transcription step resulted in single-(-) stranded DNA which had been "tagged" at its 51 end with a unique 21-nucleotide sequence or tag (segment t21) .
After reverse transcription, the oligonucleotide primer d20-t21 was efficiently removed (>99.9%) using a Centricon 100 ultrafiltration device (Amicon; Danvers, MA) according to manufacturer's recommendations. Then PCR was performed using as primers oligonucleotide t21, a 21-mer containing the same unique nucleotide sequence as in segment t21 of oligonucleotide d20-t2ι and oligonucleotide u21, a 21-mer complementary to the first strand, 244 bp upstream from oligonucleotide 2ι« PCR amplification was performed in a 50 μl reaction volume containing Tris-HCl (10 mM, pH adjusted to 8.3 at room temperature), KC1 (50 mM) , MgCl2 (1.5 mM), gelatin (0.01%), dNTP's (200 μM each), oligonucleotide t21 (5•-GACAAGCTTCAGGTAATCGAT-3• ; 0.5, μM) , oligonucleotide u21 (5«-GAGGCTTCTTCTACTACCCTA-3• ; 0.5 μm) and Taq polymerase (1 units; Perkin Elmer-Cetus Corp., Emeryville, CA) . The reaction mixture was covered with paraffin oil (approximately 50 μl) , heated to 94"C for 5 minutes, followed by PCR (45-60 cycles). Each cycle consisted of annealing (55'C, 1.5 min) , extension (72"C, 1.5 min) and denaturation (94"C, 1 min) except for the last cycle, in which the extension time was increased to 15 minutes to insure completeness of extension. Twenty microliters of the reaction mixtures were loaded onto a composite gel consisting of 1% agarose and 2% Nusieve GTG (FMC Bioproducts; Rockland, ME) in Tris-borate-EDTA buffer, electrophoresed, stained with ethidium bromide, and visualized by UV transillumination.
Since logarithmic amplification is dependent upon nucleotide sequences corresponding to d20, t2 and u21, only sequences derived from Xenopus insulin RNA which had been reverse transcribed with oligonucleotide d20-t21 were amplified logarithmically, and contaminating DNA, which lacks the oligonucleotide t21 sequence was not amplified logarithmically. Example 2: Comparison of novel RS-PCR and conventional RT-PCR using an RNA template. To test whether novel RS-PCR was as sensitive as conventional RT-PCR, Xenopus pancreatic RNA which had been reverse transcribed with oligonucleotide d20- t21 and ultrafiltered, was subjected to either conventional RT-PCR (oligonucleotides d20 and u21) , or novel RS-PCR (oligonucleotides t21 and u21) . PCR with either of these two oligonucleotide pairs resulted in similar sensitivity (FIGURE 2) .
Xenopus pancreatic RNA (1 ng) was reverse transcribed and ultrafiltered according to the methods of Example 1. For the conventional RT-PCR, 60 cycles of the
PCR were performed on serial ten-fold dilutions of reverse transcribed and ultrafiltered pancreatic RNA with oligonucleotide primers d20 and u2 (FIGURE 2, lanes 1-5) using the conditions described in Example 1. For the novel RS-PCR comparison, identical serial dilutions of the reverse transcribed and ultrafiltered pancreatic RNA was amplified by PCR using oligonucleotide primers t21 and u2ι (FIGURE 2, lanes 6-
9). The predicted 244-bp and 265-bp amplified bands observed on the ethidium bromide-stained gel hybridized strongly to a radiolabeled full-length Xenopus insulin cDNA probe [Southern J. Mol. Biol. 98, 503 (1975)]. PCR with either the oligonucleotide pair d20 and u2 or the pair t21 and u2ι resulted in similar sensitivity. Conventional RT-PCR with or without removal of excess oligonucleotide d20-t21 by Centricon 100 ultrafiltration resulted in similar sensitivity, as did reverse transcription with oligonucleotide d20 as the primer rather than oligonucleotide d20-t21. These results suggest that neither Centricon 100 ultrafiltration or reverse transcription using an oligonucleotide with a random 21-nucleotide overhang at its 5• end result in a significant decrease in sensitivity. Example 3: Comparison of novel RS-PCR and conventional RT-PCR using a DNA template By contrast to the Example 2 where the sensitivity of the reaction was not affected by the use of the unique nucleotide sequence, novel RS-PCR was approximately 10 to 1000-fold less affected by the presence of DNA contaminants (i.e., Xenopus insulin cDNA) than conventional RT-PCR even after 60 cycles (FIGURE 3) .
Full-length Xenopus insulin cDNA (300 pg) was "reverse transcribed" with oligonucleotide d20-t21, excess oligonucleotide d20-t2ι removed by ultrafiltration, and PCR (60 cycles) was accomplished as described in the above Examples. Results of the conventional RT-PCR performed on serial ten-fold dilutions of the "reverse transcribed" and ultrafiltered Xenopus insulin cDNA using oligonucleotides d20 and u21 is shown in FIGURE 3, lanes 1-5. Novel RS-PCR of identical serial ten-fold dilutions of "reverse transcribed" and ultrafiltered Xenopus insulin cDNA using oligonucleotides t21 and u21 is shown in lanes 6-10 of the same figure. In theory, with the RS-PCR method, only RNA that had been primed with oligonucleotide d2o-t21 during RT should have been amplified during PCR. However, it was found that when relatively large quantities of DNA template (>10 pg or approximately 1 x 107 molecules) were used, detectable amplification was observed (lane 6 in Fig. 3) . It has been determined from separate experiments that this phenomenon was caused by two mechanisms; i) at relatively high DNA concentrations, RT acted as a DNA polymerase and incorporated oligonucleotide d20-t2ι into the so-called first strand, and ii) the minute quantities of oligonucleotide d20-t21 that remained behind after ultrafiltration incorporated into DNA during early PCR cycles which could then be amplified efficiently in RS-PCR.
Example 4: Effect of changing the sequence of the unique segment t2. of oligonucleotide d20- t21 on conventional RT-PCR and novel RS- PCR. In order to evaluate the ability of the RS-PCR method to eliminate problems of carryover contamination of amplified DNA from previous RS-PCR experiments which had been tagged with a different unique sequence t21 the following experiment was conducted. Xenopus pancreatic RNA (1 ng) was reversed transcribed with either oligonucleotide 41-mer d20-t21 (FIGURE 4, lanes 1, 2, 3 and 7), or oligonucleotide 41- mer d20-t'21 (5»- CCGAATTCTGTAGTCCGTCATTGCAGATGGAATTGCCTTG-3•) (FIGURE 4, lanes 4-6) . After ultrafiltration, PCR (45 cycles) was accomplished as described in the previous Examples using oligonucleotide pairs t21 and u21 (FIGURE 4, lanes 1 and 4), t'21 (5'-CCGAATTCTGTAGTCCGTCA-3') and u21 (FIGURE 4, lanes 2 and 5), d20 and u21 (FIGURE 4, lanes 3 and 6), or t21 and u'21 (5'-TGACCTTTCCAGCACTTATC-3') (FIGURE 4, lane 7) . As expected, the RNA that had been reversed transcribed with oligonucleotide d20-t21 was amplified only when oligonucleotide t21 was used during PCR, but not when an unrelated unique 21-mer (oligonucleotide t'21) was used. Conversely, reverse transcription of Xenopus pancreatic RNA with oligonucleotide d20-t'21, could only be amplified by the corresponding unique 21- mer, oligonucleotide t'21, and not by the unrelated random 21-mer, oligonucleotide t21. As expected, when conventional RT-PCR was used (i.e. oligonucleotide d20) , amplification occurred regardless of whether reverse transcription primers d20-t21 or d20-t'21 were used.
MODIFIED RS-PCR Example 5: Modified RS-PCR
Oligonucleotides were synthesized on a Coder 300 automated DNA synthesizer (E.I. Du Pont Company;
Wilmington, DE) , and purified with NENsorb Prep columns (New England Nuclear; Boston, MA) according to the manufacturer's directions (see Table 1 below). Xenopus insulin (sense) RNA was prepared by ligating an 890 bp Xenopus insulin cDNA [Shuldiner et al., J. Biol. Chem. 264, 9428 (1989)] into pSP71 (Promega Biotec; Madison, WI) .
After linearization of the recombinant plasmid with Bglll, T7 RNA polymerase (Promega Biotec) was used for in vitro transcription to generate Xenopus insulin (sense) RNA. The RNA was purified by oligo-dT cellulose chromatography (Bethesda Research Laboratories) . Only full-length RNA was retained by the column since the 3' end contained a long poly-A tail. The RNA was quantitated by UV absorbance at 260 nm. RNA was diluted to the appropriate concentration in water containing yeast tRNA (100 μg/ml) (Bethesda Research Laboratories) . DNA templates used to demonstrate RNA specificity were either a double-stranded 890 bp Xenopus insulin cDNA insert [Shuldiner et al., J. Biol. Chem. 264, 9428 (1989)], or a 377 bp Xenopus insulin RS-PCR product that had been subjected to ultrafiltration with a Millipore-MC-100 device (Millipore; Bedford, MA) to remove excess primers. DNA templates were quantitated by comparison to a known quantity of a Haelll digest of PhiX174 (Bethesda Research Laboratories) after agarose gel electrophoresis.
Figure imgf000023_0001
Table I. Primer sequences used to compare improved RS-PCR to conventional RT-
PCR.
5 Primer Sequence
d17 t30 5'-GAACATCGATGACAAGCTTAGGTATCGATATGATGGAATTGCCTTGA-3' fc30 5'-GAACATCGATGACAAGCTTAGGTATCGATA-3' d16t'30 5'-CTTATACGGATATCCTGGCAATTCGGACTTGCATGATGGAATTGCC-3'
10 t
30 5»-CTTATACGGATATCCTGGCAATTCGGACTT-3' d30 5'-GCATGATGGAATTGCCTTGAAGGTGCCTTG-3 '
U30 5'-ATGCAGTGTCTGCCCCTGGTTCTTGTCCTC-3 »
Reverse transcription of serial ten-fold dilutions of Xenopus insulin RNA (107 to 104 copies) was accomplished at 37° C in a final volume of 20 μl containing KC1 (50 mM) , Tris-HCl (10 mM; pH 8.3 at 25" C) , MgCl2 (1.5 mM) , gelatin (0.01 mg/ml), dNTPs (200 μM each) , RNasin (40 U; Promega Biotec) , AMV- reverse transcriptase (7 U; Promega Biotec) , and primer.d17-t30 (0.5 μM) .
Primer d17-t30 (Table I) was a 47-mer whose sequence contained 17 bases at its 3•-end that were complementary to a region of Xenopus insulin mRNA, designated segment d17, and 30 bases at its 5'-end that were unique in sequence, designated segment t30. Thus, reverse transcription yields single-stranded DNA that contains a unique 30 base "tag" (segment t30) at its 5« end (FIGURE 5).
The second strand was synthesized during the first cycle of PCR in which 5 μl of the RT reaction mixture from step 1 was used directly in a final volume of 50 μl containing KC1 (50 mM) , Tris-HCl (10 mM; pH 8.3 at 25° C) , MgCl2 (1.5 mM) , gelatin (0.01 mg/ml), dNTPs (200 μM each), upstream primer u30 (0.5 μM) , downstream primer t30 (0.5 μM) and Taq polymerase (1.5 U; Perkin Elmer-Cetus; Emeryville, CA) .
Upstream (sense) primer u30 was a 30-mer corresponding to Xenopus insulin cDNA that was 347 bp upstream from the sequence corresponding to segment dι7, while downstream primer t30 was a 30-mer whose sequence was identical to segment t30 of RT primer d17-t30 (see Table I) . With these primers, sequences derived from RNA that had been tagged with unique sequence (t30) during reverse transcription were amplified logarithmically preferentially, while contaminating DNAs, lacking the unique tag, were not amplified logarithmically (FIGURE 5) [Shuldiner et al.. Gene 91, 139 (1990)].
After covering the PCR reaction mixture with parafin oil (approximately 50 μl) , 35 cycles of PCR were performed, each cycle consisting of denaturation (94° C, 1 mih) and annealing/extension (70° C, 2 min) . In the first cycle, the denaturation time was increased to 5 min, and in the last cycle, the annealing/extension time was increased to 10 min to ensure completeness of the extension.
Twenty microliters of the PCR reaction mixture was electrophoresed on a composite gel consisting of 1% agarose (Bethesda Research Laboratories) and 2% Nuseive GTG (FMC Bioproducts; Rockland, ME) . DNA was visualized by ethidium bromide staining and UV transillumination. Example 6: Comparison of modified RS-PCR and conventional RT-PCR To compare the sensitivity of modified RS- PCR to conventional RT-PCR, serial ten-fold dilutions of Xenopus insulin RNA (107 to 104 molecules) were amplified using either modified RS-PCR (RT primer d17-t30; PCR primers u30 and t30) (FIGURE 6, panel a, lanes 1-5) , or conventional RT-PCR (RT primer d30; PCR primers u30 and d30) (FIGURE 6, panel a, lanes 6-
9). Modified RS-PCR was equally sensitive to conventional RT-PCR when beginning with an RNA template. By contrast, when Xenopus insulin double- stranded DNA (107 copies) was used as starting template to mimic DNA contamination, conventional RT- PCR resulted, as expected, in a strong signal (FIGURE 6, panel b, lane 11) , while the modified RS-PCR method virtually ignored theDNA template (FIGURE 6, panel b, lane 10) . When larger amounts of DNA were used (i.e., > 108 copies), a faint signal was detected with RS-PCR [Shuldiner et al.. Gene 91, 139 (1990)]. To mimic RS-PCR carryover contamination, RS-
PCR was performed with two 377 bp Xenopus insulin RS- PCR products (approximately 108 copies) that were identical to each other except each contained a different unique tag (sequence t30 or t'30 (Table I and FIGURE 7) .
Double-stranded Xenopus insulin DNA containing either tag sequences t30 (FIGURE 7, lanes 1 and 2), or t'30 (FIGURE 7, lanes 3 and 4) were subjected to improved RS-PCR as described expect 30 cycles were performed. Amplification of each DNA template occurred efficiently when the primers matched the unique tag present in the PCR product (FIGURE 7 lanes 1 and 4) . However, when RS-PCR primers were used that did not match the unique tag present in the PCR product, no amplification occurred (FIGURE 7, lanes 2 and 3). Thus, carryover contamination of RS-PCR products in which one unique tag was used is virtually eliminated when RS-PCR is performed with a different unique tag. * * * * *
The entire contents of all publications cited hereinabove are hereby incorporated by reference.
While the foregoing invention has been described in some detail for purposes of clarity and understanding, it will be clear to one skilled in the art from a reading of this disclosure that various changes in form and detail can be made without departing from the true scope of the invention.

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. A method of detecting an RNA sequence comprising the steps of: i) reverse transcribing the RNA sequence from an oligonucleotide primer hybridized thereto which oligonucleotide primer (d20-t21) comprises: a) on the 3• end thereof, a nucleotide sequence complementary to the 3• end of the RNA sequence (segment d20) ; and b) on the 5' end thereof, a unique random nucleotide sequence or tag whereby a single stranded.DNA sequence is produced which has at its 5* end said unique sequence (segment t21) ; ii) removing excess oligonucleotide primer (d20-t21) ; iii) hybridizing an upstream oligonucleotide primer (u21) complementary to the 31 end of said DNA sequence thereto; iv) extending the primer (u21) so that a DNA molecule is produced having at its 3' end a nucleotide sequence complementary to said unique nucleotide sequence; v) denaturing the double-stranded DNA molecule produced in step (iv) ; vi) hybridizing the oligonucleotide primer (u21) to the 3' end of said DNA sequence to which it is complementary and hybridizing an oligonucleotide primer (t21) comprising all or a portion of said unique nucleotide sequence, to the 3' end of said DNA sequence to which it is complementary; vii) extending the primers (u21) and (t21) thereby producing two DNA molecules; and viii) detecting the presence or absence of the amplified DNA sequence.
2. The method according to claim 1 further comprising before step (viii) repeating steps v-vii multiple times.
3. The method according to claim 1 wherein said oligonucleotide primer (d20-t21) is about 41 nucleotides in length.
4. The method according to claim 1 wherein said oligonucleotide primers (u21) and (t21) are each about 21 nucleotides in length.
5. The method according to claim 1 wherein said unique random nucleotide sequence is comprised of approximately 25% of each nucleotide.
6. The method according to claim 1 wherein said RNA sequence is a segment of mRNA.
7. The method according to claim 6 wherein said segment of mRNA is a segment of insulin mRNA.
8. The method according to claim 7 wherein said insulin mRNA is Xenopus insulin mRNA.
9. The method according to claim 1 wherein said unique nucleotide sequence is 5'- GACAAGCTTCAGGTAATCGAT-3' .
10. The method according to claim 1 wherein said unique nucleotide sequence is 5'- CCGAATTCTGTAGTCCGTCA-3» .
11. The method according to claim 1 wherein said segment of RNA is contaminated with DNA.
12. A method of detecting an RNA sequence comprising the steps of: i) reverse transcribing the RNA sequence from an oligonucleotide primer hybridized thereto which oligonucleotide primer (d17-t30) comprises: a) on the 3' end thereof (segment d17) , a nucleotide sequence complementary to a region of the RNA sequence; and b) on the 5' end thereof (segment t30) , a unique nucleotide sequence or tag whereby a single stranded DNA sequence is produced which has at its 5' end said unique sequence; ii) hybridizing an upstream oligonucleotide primer (u30) , complementary to said DNA sequence, to a region of said sequence, at a temperature selected so that said d17 segment does not anneal to contaminating DNA but so that said primer u30 does anneal; iii) extending the primer (u30) so that a DNA molecule is produced having at its 3' end a nucleotide sequence complementary to said unique nucleotide sequence (segment t30) ; iv) denaturing the double-stranded DNA molecule produced in step (iii) ; v) hybridizing the oligonucleotide primer (u30) to said DNA sequence to which it is complementary and hybridizing an oligonucleotide primer (t30) comprising all or a portion of said unique nucleotide sequence, to a region of said DNA sequence to which it is complementary, wherein said hybridization is carried out at a temperature selected so that said d17 segment does not anneal to contaminating DNA but so that said primers u30 and t30 do anneal; vi) extending the primers (u30) and (t30) thereby producing two DNA molecules; and vii) detecting the presence or absence of the amplified DNA sequence;
13. The method according to claim 12 wherein said hybridization is carried out at a temperature 42* C or greater.
14. The method according to claim 12 further comprising before step (vii) repeating steps iv-vi multiple times.
15. The method according to claim 12 wherein said hybridization in steps ii and v occurs at a temperature between 65" and 72° C.
16. The method according to claim 12 wherein said oligonucleotide primer (d17-t30) is about 47 nucleotides in length.
17. The method according to claim 12 wherein said oligonucleotide primers (u30) and (t30) are each about 30 nucleotides in length.
18. The method according to claim 12 wherein said unique random nucleotide sequence is comprised of approximately 25% of each nucleotide.
19. The method according to claim 12 wherein said RNA sequence is a segment of mRNA.
20. The method according to claim 18 wherein said segment of mRNA is a segment of insulin mRNA.
21. The method according to claim 19 wherein said insulin mRNA is Xenopus insulin mRNA.
PCT/US1991/002211 1990-04-05 1991-04-04 Modified rna template-specific polymerase chain reaction WO1991015601A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU76536/91A AU7653691A (en) 1990-04-05 1991-04-04 Modified rna template-specific polymerase chain reaction

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US50459190A 1990-04-05 1990-04-05
US504,591 1990-04-05

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1991015601A1 true WO1991015601A1 (en) 1991-10-17

Family

ID=24006927

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US1991/002211 WO1991015601A1 (en) 1990-04-05 1991-04-04 Modified rna template-specific polymerase chain reaction

Country Status (2)

Country Link
AU (1) AU7653691A (en)
WO (1) WO1991015601A1 (en)

Cited By (21)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5399491A (en) * 1989-07-11 1995-03-21 Gen-Probe Incorporated Nucleic acid sequence amplification methods
US5554516A (en) * 1992-05-06 1996-09-10 Gen-Probe Incorporated Nucleic acid sequence amplification method, composition and kit
WO1997029211A1 (en) * 1996-02-09 1997-08-14 The Government Of The United States Of America, Represented By The Secretary, Department Of Health And Human Services RESTRICTION DISPLAY (RD-PCR) OF DIFFERENTIALLY EXPRESSED mRNAs
US5766849A (en) * 1989-07-11 1998-06-16 Gen-Probe Incorporated Methods of amplifying nucleic acids using promoter-containing primer sequence
WO1999020798A1 (en) * 1997-10-23 1999-04-29 Exact Laboratories, Inc. Methods for detecting contamination in molecular diagnostics using pcr
WO2000008208A2 (en) * 1998-08-05 2000-02-17 Medical Research Council Reverse transcription and amplification processes and primers therefor
WO2001006004A2 (en) * 1999-07-19 2001-01-25 Cambridge University Technical Services Ltd. A method for amplifying low abundance nucleic acid sequences and means for performing said method
EP1171634A1 (en) * 1999-04-08 2002-01-16 Oasis Biosciences, Inc. Amplification and sequencing primer pairs and use thereof
US6818404B2 (en) 1997-10-23 2004-11-16 Exact Sciences Corporation Methods for detecting hypermethylated nucleic acid in heterogeneous biological samples
EP1508624A1 (en) * 2003-08-22 2005-02-23 Institut National De La Sante Et De La Recherche Medicale (Inserm) A quantification method for integrated viruses
WO2005113803A1 (en) * 2004-05-19 2005-12-01 Amplion Limited Detection of amplicon contamination during pcr exhibiting two different annealing temperatures
US7009041B1 (en) 1989-07-11 2006-03-07 Gen-Probe Incorporated Oligonucleotides for nucleic acid amplification and for the detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
WO2007146154A1 (en) * 2006-06-06 2007-12-21 Gen-Probe Incorporated Tagged oligonucleotides and their use in nucleic acid amplification methods
US7790877B2 (en) 1997-10-02 2010-09-07 Gen-Probe, Incorporated Antisense oligonucleotides with increased RNase sensitivity
US7833716B2 (en) 2006-06-06 2010-11-16 Gen-Probe Incorporated Tagged oligonucleotides and their use in nucleic acid amplification methods
US8153772B2 (en) 1997-10-02 2012-04-10 Gen-Probe Incorporated Oligonucleotide probes and primers comprising universal bases for diagnostic purposes
US8198027B2 (en) 2006-12-21 2012-06-12 Gen-Probe Incorporated Methods and compositions for nucleic acid amplification
US8512955B2 (en) 2009-07-01 2013-08-20 Gen-Probe Incorporated Methods and compositions for nucleic acid amplification
EP2746405A1 (en) * 2012-12-23 2014-06-25 HS Diagnomics GmbH Methods and primer sets for high throughput PCR sequencing
EP3042962A1 (en) * 2015-01-07 2016-07-13 Universitätsklinikum Erlangen Tag-aided sense-antisense transcript detection
US9879316B2 (en) 2012-04-25 2018-01-30 Tho Huu Ho Method for competitive allele-specific cDNA synthesis and differential amplification of the cDNA products

Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4683195A (en) * 1986-01-30 1987-07-28 Cetus Corporation Process for amplifying, detecting, and/or-cloning nucleic acid sequences

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4683195A (en) * 1986-01-30 1987-07-28 Cetus Corporation Process for amplifying, detecting, and/or-cloning nucleic acid sequences
US4683195B1 (en) * 1986-01-30 1990-11-27 Cetus Corp

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
SCIENCE, Vol. 243, issued 13 January 1989, E.Y. LOH et al., "Polymerase Chain Reaction with Single-Sided Specificity: Analysis of T Cell Receptor Delta Chain", pages 217-220. *

Cited By (53)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5399491A (en) * 1989-07-11 1995-03-21 Gen-Probe Incorporated Nucleic acid sequence amplification methods
US5766849A (en) * 1989-07-11 1998-06-16 Gen-Probe Incorporated Methods of amplifying nucleic acids using promoter-containing primer sequence
US7009041B1 (en) 1989-07-11 2006-03-07 Gen-Probe Incorporated Oligonucleotides for nucleic acid amplification and for the detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
US5908744A (en) * 1989-07-11 1999-06-01 Gen-Probe Incorporated Detecting Mycobacterium tuberculosis by nucleic acid sequence amplification
US5554516A (en) * 1992-05-06 1996-09-10 Gen-Probe Incorporated Nucleic acid sequence amplification method, composition and kit
US5888729A (en) * 1992-05-06 1999-03-30 Gen-Probe Incorporated Oligonucleotide probes and methods for detecting Streptococcus pneumoniae
WO1997029211A1 (en) * 1996-02-09 1997-08-14 The Government Of The United States Of America, Represented By The Secretary, Department Of Health And Human Services RESTRICTION DISPLAY (RD-PCR) OF DIFFERENTIALLY EXPRESSED mRNAs
US6270966B1 (en) 1996-02-09 2001-08-07 The United States Of America As Represented By The Department Of Health And Human Services Restriction display (RD-PCR) of differentially expressed mRNAs
US7790877B2 (en) 1997-10-02 2010-09-07 Gen-Probe, Incorporated Antisense oligonucleotides with increased RNase sensitivity
US8153772B2 (en) 1997-10-02 2012-04-10 Gen-Probe Incorporated Oligonucleotide probes and primers comprising universal bases for diagnostic purposes
US6844155B2 (en) 1997-10-23 2005-01-18 Exact Sciences Corporation Methods for detecting contamination in molecular diagnostics using PCR
WO1999020798A1 (en) * 1997-10-23 1999-04-29 Exact Laboratories, Inc. Methods for detecting contamination in molecular diagnostics using pcr
AU753732B2 (en) * 1997-10-23 2002-10-24 Genzyme Corporation Methods for detecting contamination in molecular diagnostics using PCR
US6818404B2 (en) 1997-10-23 2004-11-16 Exact Sciences Corporation Methods for detecting hypermethylated nucleic acid in heterogeneous biological samples
WO2000008208A3 (en) * 1998-08-05 2000-05-11 Medical Res Council Reverse transcription and amplification processes and primers therefor
WO2000008208A2 (en) * 1998-08-05 2000-02-17 Medical Research Council Reverse transcription and amplification processes and primers therefor
EP1171634A1 (en) * 1999-04-08 2002-01-16 Oasis Biosciences, Inc. Amplification and sequencing primer pairs and use thereof
EP1171634A4 (en) * 1999-04-08 2002-07-31 Oasis Biosciences Inc Amplification and sequencing primer pairs and use thereof
WO2001006004A3 (en) * 1999-07-19 2001-08-09 Univ Cambridge Tech A method for amplifying low abundance nucleic acid sequences and means for performing said method
WO2001006004A2 (en) * 1999-07-19 2001-01-25 Cambridge University Technical Services Ltd. A method for amplifying low abundance nucleic acid sequences and means for performing said method
EP1508624A1 (en) * 2003-08-22 2005-02-23 Institut National De La Sante Et De La Recherche Medicale (Inserm) A quantification method for integrated viruses
WO2005019479A1 (en) * 2003-08-22 2005-03-03 Institut National De La Sante Et De La Recherche Medicale (Inserm) A quantification method for integrated viruses
WO2005113803A1 (en) * 2004-05-19 2005-12-01 Amplion Limited Detection of amplicon contamination during pcr exhibiting two different annealing temperatures
JP2007537746A (en) * 2004-05-19 2007-12-27 アンプリオン リミティッド Amplicon contamination detection method during PCR showing two different annealing temperatures
US7833716B2 (en) 2006-06-06 2010-11-16 Gen-Probe Incorporated Tagged oligonucleotides and their use in nucleic acid amplification methods
AU2007258455B2 (en) * 2006-06-06 2013-05-02 Gen-Probe Incorporated Tagged oligonucleotides and their use in nucleic acid amplification methods
EP2017356A3 (en) * 2006-06-06 2009-05-06 Gen-Probe Incorporated Tagged oliggonucleotides and their use in nucleic acid amplification methods
EP2345740A1 (en) * 2006-06-06 2011-07-20 Gen-Probe Incorporated Tagged oligonucleotides and their use in nucleic acid amplification methods
US8034570B2 (en) 2006-06-06 2011-10-11 Gen-Probe Incorporated Tagged oligonucleotides and their use in nucleic acid amplification methods
WO2007146154A1 (en) * 2006-06-06 2007-12-21 Gen-Probe Incorporated Tagged oligonucleotides and their use in nucleic acid amplification methods
US10167500B2 (en) 2006-06-06 2019-01-01 Gen-Probe Incorporated Tagged oligonucleotides and their use in nucleic acid amplification methods
US8278052B2 (en) 2006-06-06 2012-10-02 Gen-Probe Incorporated Tagged oligonucleotides and their use in nucleic acid amplification methods
JP2013027408A (en) * 2006-06-06 2013-02-07 Gen-Probe Inc Tagged oligonucleotide and the use in nucleic acid amplification method
US9284549B2 (en) 2006-06-06 2016-03-15 Gen-Probe Incorporated Tagged oligonucleotides and their use in nucleic acid amplification methods
USRE48909E1 (en) 2006-06-06 2022-02-01 Gen-Probe Incorporated Tagged oligonucleotides and their use in nucleic acid amplification methods
US8580510B2 (en) 2006-06-06 2013-11-12 Gen-Probe Incorporated Tagged oligonucleotides and their use in nucleic acid amplification methods
JP2009539379A (en) * 2006-06-06 2009-11-19 ジェン−プロウブ インコーポレイテッド Tagged oligonucleotides and their use in nucleic acid amplification methods
US10415092B2 (en) 2006-12-21 2019-09-17 Gen-Probe Incorporated Methods and compositions for nucleic acid amplification
US10407723B2 (en) 2006-12-21 2019-09-10 Gen-Probe Incorporated Methods and compositions for nucleic acid amplification
US8642268B2 (en) 2006-12-21 2014-02-04 Gen-Probe Incorporated Methods and compositions for nucleic acid amplification
US9677135B2 (en) 2006-12-21 2017-06-13 Gen-Probe Incorporated Methods and compositions for nucleic acid amplification
US8198027B2 (en) 2006-12-21 2012-06-12 Gen-Probe Incorporated Methods and compositions for nucleic acid amplification
US9169512B2 (en) 2009-07-01 2015-10-27 Gen-Probe Incorporated Methods and compositions for nucleic acid amplification
US9399796B2 (en) 2009-07-01 2016-07-26 Gen-Probe Incorporated Methods and compositions for nucleic acid amplification
US10119163B2 (en) 2009-07-01 2018-11-06 Gen-Probe Incorporated Methods and compositions for nucleic acid amplification
US10724085B2 (en) 2009-07-01 2020-07-28 Gen-Probe Incorporated Methods and compositions for nucleic acid amplification
US8512955B2 (en) 2009-07-01 2013-08-20 Gen-Probe Incorporated Methods and compositions for nucleic acid amplification
US9879316B2 (en) 2012-04-25 2018-01-30 Tho Huu Ho Method for competitive allele-specific cDNA synthesis and differential amplification of the cDNA products
WO2014096394A1 (en) * 2012-12-23 2014-06-26 Hs Diagnomics Gmbh Methods and primer sets for high throughput pcr sequencing
EP2746405A1 (en) * 2012-12-23 2014-06-25 HS Diagnomics GmbH Methods and primer sets for high throughput PCR sequencing
US10894983B2 (en) 2012-12-23 2021-01-19 Hs Diagnomics Gmbh Methods and primer sets for high throughput PCR sequencing
WO2016110533A1 (en) * 2015-01-07 2016-07-14 Universitätsklinikum Erlangen Tag-aided sense-antisense transcript detection
EP3042962A1 (en) * 2015-01-07 2016-07-13 Universitätsklinikum Erlangen Tag-aided sense-antisense transcript detection

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU7653691A (en) 1991-10-30

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
WO1991015601A1 (en) Modified rna template-specific polymerase chain reaction
US5437990A (en) Selective amplification of target polynucleotide sequences
US5169766A (en) Amplification of nucleic acid molecules
US6090591A (en) Selective amplification of target polynucleotide sequences
US5869251A (en) Use of primers containing nucleotides having altered base pairing characteristics in the amplification of nucleic acid molecules
CA2125004C (en) Simultaneous amplification of multiple targets
US5580726A (en) Method and Kit for enhanced differential display
EP1448793B1 (en) Annealing control primer and its uses
EP2365079A1 (en) Processes using dual specificity oligonucleotide and dual specificity oligonucleotide
EP2365078A1 (en) Processes using dual specificity oligonucleotide and dual specificity oligonucleotide
EP0666927B1 (en) Method of detecting a nucleic acid sequence
JPH05292968A (en) Improvement for nucleic acid amplification
US20030152925A1 (en) Annealing control primer system for regulating primer annealing specificity and its applications
US20040091923A1 (en) Linked linear amplification of nucleic acids
EP1019540A1 (en) Efficient linking of nucleic acid segments
US5814489A (en) PCR amplification of mRNA
US6335184B1 (en) Linked linear amplification of nucleic acids
Hartl et al. Inverse polymerase chain reaction
US5543509A (en) Method for quantifying laminin and β-actin messenger RNA
US6773901B2 (en) PCR primers and a method for deciding a base sequence thereof regarding adenylation
Arends et al. Recombinant DNA technology and its diagnostic applications
Sisk RT-PCR: Quantitative and Diagnostic PCR in the Analysis of Gene Expression
Greber-Platzer et al. Using the quantitative competitive RT-PCR technique to analyze minute amounts of different mRNAs in small tissue samples
Haddad et al. Analysis of Gene Expression: Reverse Transcription-Polymerase Chain Reaction
JP2000055914A (en) Gene detecting method

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AU CA JP

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AT BE CH DE DK ES FR GB GR IT LU NL SE

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: CA