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A High-Throughput Method for Direct Detection of Therapeutic Oligonucleotide-Induced Gene Silencing In Vivo.

Authors :
Coles AH
Osborn MF
Alterman JF
Turanov AA
Godinho BM
Kennington L
Chase K
Aronin N
Khvorova A
Source :
Nucleic acid therapeutics [Nucleic Acid Ther] 2016 Apr; Vol. 26 (2), pp. 86-92. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Nov 23.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Preclinical development of RNA interference (RNAi)-based therapeutics requires a rapid, accurate, and robust method of simultaneously quantifying mRNA knockdown in hundreds of samples. The most well-established method to achieve this is quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR), a labor-intensive methodology that requires sample purification, which increases the potential to introduce additional bias. Here, we describe that the QuantiGene(®) branched DNA (bDNA) assay linked to a 96-well Qiagen TissueLyser II is a quick and reproducible alternative to qRT-PCR for quantitative analysis of mRNA expression in vivo directly from tissue biopsies. The bDNA assay is a high-throughput, plate-based, luminescence technique, capable of directly measuring mRNA levels from tissue lysates derived from various biological samples. We have performed a systematic evaluation of this technique for in vivo detection of RNAi-based silencing. We show that similar quality data is obtained from purified RNA and tissue lysates. In general, we observe low intra- and inter-animal variability (around 10% for control samples), and high intermediate precision. This allows minimization of sample size for evaluation of oligonucleotide efficacy in vivo.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2159-3345
Volume :
26
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nucleic acid therapeutics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26595721
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/nat.2015.0578