← Back to search

RNA-seq analysis of gene expression and alternative splicing by double-random priming strategy.

Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.) · 2011 · Vol. 729 · pp. 247-55

Abstract

Transcriptome analysis by deep sequencing, more commonly known as RNA-seq is, becoming the method of choice for gene discovery and quantitative splicing detection. We published a double-random priming RNA-seq approach capable of generating strand-specific information [Li et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 105:20179-20184, 2008]. Poly(A)+  RNA from a treated and an untreated sample were utilized to generate RNA-seq libraries that were sequenced on the Illumina GA1 analyzer. Statistical analysis of approximately ten million sequence reads generated from both control and treated cells suggests that this tag density is sufficient for quantitative analysis of gene expression. We were also able to detect a large fraction of reads corresponding to annotated alternative exons, with a subset of the reads matching known and detecting new splice junctions. In this chapter, we provide a detailed, bench-ready protocol for the double-random priming method and provide user-friendly templates for the curve-fitting model described in the paper to estimate the tag density needed for optimal detection of regulated gene expression and alternative splicing.

Publication Types

["Journal Article", "Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural"]

Keywords

[]

MeSH Terms

["Alternative Splicing", "DNA, Complementary", "Exons", "Gene Expression", "Gene Expression Profiling", "Gene Library", "High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing", "Polymerase Chain Reaction", "RNA, Messenger", "Sequence Analysis, RNA"]

Funding

R01 HG004659 NHGRI NIH HHS (United States)
R01 GM052872 NIGMS NIH HHS (United States)
HG004659 NHGRI NIH HHS (United States)
R01 GM084317 NIGMS NIH HHS (United States)
GM084317 NIGMS NIH HHS (United States)
GM052872 NIGMS NIH HHS (United States)