Vol. 12, Issue 6, 985-995, June 2002
METHODS
An Integrated Computational and Laboratory Approach for Selective Amplification of mRNAs Containing the Adenylate Uridylate-Rich Element Consensus Sequence
Khalid S.A.
Khabar,1,3
Mohammed
Dhalla,1
Tala
Bakheet,2
Cheikh
Sy,1 and
Latifa
al-Haj1
1 Department of Biological and Medical Research and
2 Department of Biostatistics, Epidemiology, and Scientific
Computing (Bioinformatics Section), King Faisal Specialist Hospital and
Research Center, Riyadh 11211, Saudi Arabia
Messenger RNAs that have the stability determinants,
adenylate uridylate-rich elements (AREs), in their 3' untranslated
region (UTR) code for key products that regulate early and transient biological responses. We used a computational laboratory approach for
amplification of large, including full-length, protein-coding regions
for ARE genes. Statistical analysis of the initiation regions in the 5'
UTR of ARE-mRNAs was performed. Accordingly, several 5'
primers and a single universal 3' primer that targeted the initiation
consensuses and ARE regions, respectively, were designed. Using
optimized conditions, the primers were able to enrich and amplify large
protein-coding regions for the ARE gene family. The selective
amplification of ARE cDNAs was verified using specific polymerase chain
reactions (PCRs) to known ARE mRNA molecules and monitoring the
abundance of the non-ARE
-actin signal. A mini-library from the
amplified ARE products was constructed for further confirmation of ARE
selection. Distinct ARE amplified cDNA pools were selectively generated
by distinct 5' primers. The biological utility of the method was shown
with differential display. The up-regulation of several ARE-mRNAs,
including the full-length coding region of the small inducible cytokine
A4 (SCYA4) gene, was shown in endotoxin-stimulated monocytic
cells. The integrated computational and laboratory approach should lead
to enhanced capability for discovery and expression analysis of early
and transient response genes.
3
Corresponding author.
12:985-995 ©2002 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press ISSN 1088-9051/02 $5.00