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Vol. 12, Issue 6, 976-984, June 2002
METHODS
A Highly Reproducible, Linear, and Automated Sample Preparation Method for DNA Microarrays
David R.
Dorris,1
Ramesh
Ramakrishnan,
Dionisios
Trakas,
Frank
Dudzik,
Richard
Belval,
Connie
Zhao,
Allen
Nguyen,
Marc
Domanus, and
Abhijit
Mazumder
Motorola Life Sciences, Northbrook, Illinois 60062, USA
DNA microarrays are powerful tools to detect changes in transcript
abundance in multiple samples in parallel. However, detection of
differential transcript levels requires a reproducible sample (target)
preparation method in addition to a high-performance microarray.
Therefore, we optimized a target-preparation method that converts the
poly(A)+ RNA fraction of total RNA into complementary DNA,
then generates biotin-labeled complementary RNA from the cDNA. We
measured the efficiency of incorporation of biotin-containing
nucleotides by an enzymatic digestion, followed by resolution via
analytical high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). When the
target was hybridized to a sensitive and reproducible microarray
platform, low coefficients of variation in both hybridization
intensities and differential expression ratios across target
preparations were observed. Nearly identical hybridization intensities
and expression ratios are observed regardless of whether
poly(A)+-enriched RNA or total RNA is used as the starting
material. We show the ability to discern biological and production
variability through the use of different lots of commercial samples as
visualized by hierarchical clustering. Automation of the
target-preparation procedure shows equivalence to the manual procedure,
reproducible yields of target, and low variability as measured by
hybridization to microarrays. Most importantly, RNA mixing experiments
show a linear and quantitative amplification in probe hybridization signals for >6000 genes across the entire signal range.
1
Corresponding author.
12:976-984 ©2002 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press ISSN 1088-9051/02 $5.00

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