Search Thermo Fisher Scientific
Search Thermo Fisher Scientific
by Subbu Dharmaraj, MS
RT-PCR (reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction) is the most sensitive technique for mRNA detection and quantitation currently available. Compared to the two other commonly used techniques for quantifying mRNA levels, Northern blot analysis and RNase protection assay, RT-PCR can be used to quantify mRNA levels from much smaller samples. In fact, this technique is sensitive enough to enable quantitation of RNA from a single cell.
This article first discusses the advantages of real-time RT-PCR compared to end-point methods. This discussion is followed by a description of the different methods for quantitating gene expression by real-time RT-PCR with respect to the different chemistries available, the quantitation methods used and the instrumentation options available. Subsequently, the “traditional” methods of quantitating gene expression by RT-PCR, i.e. end-point techniques, are presented.
Over the last several years, the development of novel chemistries and instrumentation platforms enabling detection of PCR products on a real-time basis has led to widespread adoption of real-time RT-PCR as the method of choice for quantitating changes in gene expression. Furthermore, real-time RT-PCR has become the preferred method for validating results obtained from array analyses and other techniques that evaluate gene expression changes on a global scale.
To truly appreciate the benefits of real-time PCR, a review of PCR fundamentals is necessary. At the start of a PCR reaction, reagents are in excess, template and product are at low enough concentrations that product renaturation does not compete with primer binding, and amplification proceeds at a constant, exponential rate. The point at which the reaction rate ceases to be exponential and enters a linear phase of amplification is extremely variable, even among replicate samples, but it appears to be primarily due to product renaturation competing with primer binding (since adding more reagents or enzyme has little effect). At some later cycle the amplification rate drops to near zero (plateaus), and little more product is made.
For the sake of accuracy and precision, it is necessary to collect quantitative data at a point in which every sample is in the exponential phase of amplification (since it is only in this phase that amplification is extremely reproducible). Analysis of reactions during exponential phase at a given cycle number should theoretically provide several orders of magnitude of dynamic range. Rare targets will probably be below the limit of detection, while abundant targets will be past the exponential phase. In practice, a dynamic range of 2-3 logs can be quantitated during end-point relative RT-PCR. In order to extend this range, replicate reactions may be performed for a greater or lesser number of cycles, so that all of the samples can be analyzed in the exponential phase.
Real-time PCR automates this otherwise laborious process by quantitating reaction products for each sample in every cycle. The result is an amazingly broad 107-fold dynamic range, with no user intervention or replicates required. Data analysis, including standard curve generation and copy number calculation, is performed automatically. With increasing numbers of labs and core facilities acquiring the instrumentation required for real-time analysis, this technique is becoming the dominant RT-PCR-based quantitation technique.
Currently four different chemistries—Applied Biosystems™ TaqMan® and SYBR™ Green, Molecular Beacons, and Scorpions® chemstries—are available for real-time PCR. All of these chemistries allow detection of PCR products via the generation of a fluorescent signal. TaqMan probes, Molecular Beacons and Scorpions depend on Förster Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) to generate the fluorescence signal via the coupling of a fluorogenic dye molecule and a quencher moeity to the same or different oligonucleotide substrates. SYBR Green is a fluorogenic dye that exhibits little fluorescence when in solution, but emits a strong fluorescent signal upon binding to double-stranded DNA.
TaqMan probes depend on the 5'- nuclease activity of the DNA polymerase used for PCR to hydrolyze an oligonucleotide that is hybridized to the target amplicon. TaqMan probes are oligonucleotides that have a fluorescent reporter dye attached to the 5' end and a quencher moeity coupled to the 3' end. These probes are designed to hybridize to an internal region of a PCR product. In the unhybridized state, the proximity of the fluor and the quench molecules prevents the detection of fluorescent signal from the probe. During PCR, when the polymerase replicates a template on which a TaqMan probe is bound, the 5'- nuclease activity of the polymerase cleaves the probe. This decouples the fluorescent and quenching dyes and FRET no longer occurs. Thus, fluorescence increases in each cycle, proportional to the amount of probe cleavage
Well-designed TaqMan probes require very little optimization. In addition, they can be used for multiplex assays by designing each probe with a spectrally unique fluor/quench pair. However, TaqMan probes can be expensive to synthesize, with a separate probe needed for each mRNA target being analyzed.
Like TaqMan probes, Molecular Beacons also use FRET to detect and quantitate the synthesized PCR product via a fluor coupled to the 5' end and a quench attached to the 3' end of an oligonucleotide substrate. Unlike TaqMan probes, Molecular Beacons are designed to remain intact during the amplification reaction, and must rebind to target in every cycle for signal measurement. Molecular Beacons form a stem-loop structure when free in solution. Thus, the close proximity of the fluor and quench molecules prevents the probe from fluorescing. When a Molecular Beacon hybridizes to a target, the fluorescent dye and quencher are separated, FRET does not occur, and the fluorescent dye emits light upon irradiation.
Molecular Beacons, like TaqMan probes, can be used for multiplex assays by using spectrally separated fluor/quench moieties on each probe. As with TaqMan probes, Molecular Beacons can be expensive to synthesize, with a separate probe required for each target.
With Scorpion probes, sequence-specific priming and PCR product detection is achieved using a single oligonucleotide. The Scorpion probe maintains a stem-loop configuration in the unhybridized state. The fluorophore is attached to the 5' end and is quenched by a moiety coupled to the 3' end. The 3' portion of the stem also contains sequence that is complementary to the extension product of the primer. This sequence is linked to the 5' end of a specific primer via a non-amplifiable monomer. After extension of the Scorpion primer, the specific probe sequence is able to bind to its complement within the extended amplicon thus opening up the hairpin loop. This prevents the fluorescence from being quenched and a signal is observed.
SYBR Green provides the simplest and most economical format for detecting and quantitating PCR products in real-time reactions. SYBR Green binds double-stranded DNA, and upon excitation emits light. Thus, as a PCR product accumulates, fluorescence increases. The advantages of SYBR Green are that it is inexpensive, easy to use, and sensitive. The disadvantage is that SYBR Green will bind to any double-stranded DNA in the reaction, including primer-dimers and other non-specific reaction products, which results in an overestimation of the target concentration. For single PCR product reactions with well designed primers, SYBR Green can work extremely well, with spurious non-specific background only showing up in very late cycles.
SYBR Green is the most economical choice for real-time PCR product detection. Since the dye binds to double-stranded DNA, there is no need to design a probe for any particular target being analyzed. However, detection by SYBR Green requires extensive optimization. Since the dye cannot distinguish between specific and non-specific product accumulated during PCR, follow up assays are needed to validate results.
TaqMan probes, Molecular Beacons and Scorpions allow multiple DNA species to be measured in the same sample (multiplex PCR), since fluorescent dyes with different emission spectra may be attached to the different probes. Multiplex PCR allows internal controls to be co-amplified and permits allele discrimination in single-tube, homogeneous assays. These hybridization probes afford a level of discrimination impossible to obtain with SYBR Green, since they will only hybridize to true targets in a PCR and not to primer-dimers or other spurious products.
Two strategies are commonly employed to quantify the results obtained by real-time RT-PCR; the standard curve method and the comparative threshold method. These are discussed briefly below.
In this method, a standard curve is first constructed from an RNA of known concentration. This curve is then used as a reference standard for extrapolating quantitative information for mRNA targets of unknown concentrations. Though RNA standards can be used, their stability can be a source of variability in the final analyses. In addition, using RNA standards would involve the construction of cDNA plasmids that have to be in vitro transcribed into the RNA standards and accurately quantitated, a time-consuming process. However, the use of absolutely quantitated RNA standards will help generate absolute copy number data.
In addition to RNA, other nucleic acid samples can be used to construct the standard curve, including purified plasmid dsDNA, in vitro generated ssDNA or any cDNA sample expressing the target gene. Spectrophotometric measurements at 260 nm can be used to assess the concentration of these DNAs, which can then be converted to a copy number value based on the molecular weight of the sample used. cDNA plasmids are the preferred standards for standard curve quantitation. However, since cDNA plasmids will not control for variations in the efficiency of the reverse transcription step, this method will only yield information on relative changes in mRNA expression. This, and variation introduced due to variable RNA inputs, can be corrected by normalization to a housekeeping gene.
Another quantitation approach is termed the comparative Ct method. This involves comparing the Ct values of the samples of interest with a control or calibrator such as a non-treated sample or RNA from normal tissue. The Ct values of both the calibrator and the samples of interest are normalized to an appropriate endogenous housekeeping gene.
The comparative Ct method is also known as the 2–[delta][delta]Ct method, where
[delta][delta]Ct = [delta]Ct,sample - [delta]Ct,reference
Here, [delta]CT,sample is the Ct value for any sample normalized to the endogenous housekeeping gene and [delta]Ct, reference is the Ct value for the calibrator also normalized to the endogenous housekeeping gene.
For the [delta][delta]Ct calculation to be valid, the amplification efficiencies of the target and the endogenous reference must be approximately equal. This can be established by looking at how [delta]Ct varies with template dilution. If the plot of cDNA dilution versus delta Ct is close to zero, it implies that the efficiencies of the target and housekeeping genes are very similar. If a housekeeping gene cannot be found whose amplification efficiency is similar to the target, then the standard curve method is preferred.
Real-time PCR requires an instrumentation platform that consists of a thermal cycler, a computer, optics for fluorescence excitation and emission collection, and data acquisition and analysis software. These machines, available from several manufacturers, differ in sample capacity (some are 96-well standard format, others process fewer samples or require specialized glass capillary tubes), method of excitation (some use lasers, others broad spectrum light sources with tunable filters), and overall sensitivity. There are also platform-specific differences in how the software processes data. Real-time PCR machines are not inexpensive, currently about $25K - $95K, but are well within purchasing reach of core facilities or labs that have the need for high throughput quantitative analysis. For a comprehensive list of real-time thermal cyclers please see the weblink at the end of this article.
The Invitrogen™ MessageSensor™ RT Kit includes an RNase H+ MMLV RT that clearly outperforms MMLV RT enzymes that have abolished RNase H activity in real-time RT-PCR experiments. Unlike many other qRT-PCR kits, MessageSensor includes a total RNA control, a control human GAPDH primer set, RNase inhibitor, and nucleotides, as well as a buffer additive that enables detection with SYBR® Green dye.
The Invitrogen™ Cells-to-cDNA™ II Kit produces cDNA from cultured mammalian cells in less than 2 hours. No RNA isolation is required. This kit is ideal for those who want to perform reverse transcription reactions on small numbers of cells, numerous cell samples, or for scientists who are unfamiliar with RNA isolation. The Cells-to-cDNA II Kit contains a novel Cell Lysis Buffer that inactivates endogenous RNases without compromising downstream enzymatic reactions. After inactivation of RNases, the cell lysate can be directly added to a cDNA synthesis reaction. Cells-to-cDNA II is compatible with both one-step and two-step real-time RT-PCR protocols.
Genomic DNA contamination can lead to false positive RT-PCR results. Invitrogen offers a variety of tools for eliminating genomic DNA contamination from RNA samples prior to RT-PCR. The Invitrogen™ DNA-free™ DNA Removal Kit is designed for removing contaminating DNA from RNA samples and for the removal of DNase after treatment without Proteinase K treatment and organic extraction. In addition, Invitrogen has also developed TURBO™ DNase, a hyperactive enzyme engineered from wild-type bovine DNase. The proficiency of TURBO DNase in binding very low concentrations of DNA means that the enzyme is particularly effective in removing trace quantities of DNA contamination.
Invitrogen now also offers an economical alternative to the high cost of PCR reagents for the ABI 7700 and other 0.2 ml tube-based real-time instruments. SuperTaq™ Real-Time performs as well or better than the more expensive alternatives, and includes dNTPs and a Reaction Buffer optimized for SYBR Green, TaqMan, and Molecular Beacon chemistries.
In spite of the rapid advances made in the area of real-time PCR detection chemistries and instrumentation, end-point RT-PCR still remains a very commonly used technique for measuring changes in gene-expression in small sample numbers.
End-point RT-PCR can be used to measure changes in expression levels using three different methods: relative, competitive and comparative. The most commonly used procedures for quantitating end-point RT-PCR results rely on detecting a fluorescent dye such as ethidium bromide, or quantitation of P32-labeled PCR product by a phosphorimager or, to a lesser extent, by scintillation counting.
Relative quantitation compares transcript abundance across multiple samples, using a co-amplified internal control for sample normalization. Results are expressed as ratios of the gene-specific signal to the internal control signal. This yields a corrected relative value for the gene-specific product in each sample. These values may be compared between samples for an estimate of the relative expression of target RNA in the samples; for example, 2.5-fold more IL-12 in sample 2 than in sample 1.
Absolute quantitation, using competitive RT-PCR, measures the absolute amount (e.g., 5.3 x 105 copies) of a specific mRNA sequence in a sample. Dilutions of a synthetic RNA (identical in sequence, but slightly shorter than the endogenous target) are added to sample RNA replicates and are co-amplified with the endogenous target. The PCR product from the endogenous transcript is then compared to the concentration curve created by the synthetic "competitor RNA."
Comparative RT-PCR mimics competitive RT-PCR in that target message from each RNA sample competes for amplification reagents within a single reaction, making the technique reliably quantitative. Because the cDNA from both samples have the same PCR primer binding site, one sample acts as a competitor for the other, making it unnecessary to synthesize a competitor RNA sequence.
Both relative and competitive RT-PCR quantitation techniques require pilot experiments. In the case of relative RT-PCR, pilot experiments include selection of a quantitation method and determination of the exponential range of amplification for each mRNA under study. For competitive RT-PCR, a synthetic RNA competitor transcript must be synthesized and used in pilot experiments to determine the appropriate range for the standard curve. Comparative RT-PCR yields similar sensitivity as relative and competitive RT-PCR, but requires significantly less optimization and does not require synthesis of a competitor.
Relative RT-PCR uses primers for an internal control that are multiplexed in the same RT-PCR reaction with the gene specific primers. Internal control and gene-specific primers must be compatible — that is, they must not produce additional bands or hybridize to each other. The expression of the internal control should be constant across all samples being analyzed. Then the signal from the internal control can be used to normalize sample data to account for tube-to-tube differences caused by variable RNA quality or RT efficiency, inaccurate quantitation or pipetting. Common internal controls include ß-actin and GAPDH mRNAs and 18S rRNA. Unlike Northerns and nuclease protection assays, where an internal control probe is simply added to the experiment, the use of internal controls in relative RT-PCR requires substantial optimization.
For relative RT-PCR data to be meaningful, the PCR reaction must be terminated when the products from both the internal control and the gene of interest are detectable and are being amplified within exponential phase (see Determining Exponential Range in PCR). Because internal control RNAs are typically constitutively expressed housekeeping genes of high abundance, their amplification surpasses exponential phase with very few PCR cycles. It is therefore difficult to identify compatible exponential phase conditions where the PCR product from a rare message is detectable. Detection methods with low sensitivity, like ethidium bromide staining of agarose gels, are therefore not recommended. Detecting a rare message while staying in exponential range with an abundant message can be achieved several ways: 1) by increasing the sensitivity of product detection, 2) by decreasing the amount of input template in the RT or PCR reactions and/or 3) by decreasing the number of PCR cycles.
Ambion recommends using 18S rRNA as an internal control because it shows less variance in expression across treatment conditions than ß-actin and GAPDH. However, because of its abundance, it is difficult to detect the PCR product for rare messages in the exponential phase of amplification of 18S rRNA. Invitrogen's patented Competimer™ Technology solves this problem by attenuating the 18S rRNA signal even to the level of rare messages. Attenuation results from the use of competimers — primers identical in sequence to the functional 18S rRNA primers but that are "blocked" at their 3'-end and, thus, cannot be extended by PCR. Competimers and primers are mixed at various ratios to reduce the amount of PCR product generated from 18S rRNA. Figure 1 illustrates that 18S rRNA primers without competimers cannot be used as an internal control because the 18S rRNA amplification overwhelms that of clathrin (compare panels A and B). Mixing primers with competimers at a 3:7 ratio attenuates the 18S rRNA signal, making 18S rRNA a practical internal control (panel C).
Figure 1. The Invitrogen™ QuantumRNA™ Technology in Multiplex Quantitative RT-PCR using 18S rRNA as an Internal Control.
RT-PCR reactions on brain, embryo, liver, and spleen total RNA using A) primers for clathrin, B) primers for clathrin and 18S, or C) primers for clathrin, 18S rRNA primers and 18S rRNA Competimers. Note that without Competimers, 18S cannot be used as an internal control because of its high abundance (B). Addition of Competimers (C) makes multiplex PCR possible, providing sample-to-sample relative quantitation.
The Invitrogen™ QuantumRNA™ 18S Internal Standards contain 18S rRNA primers and competimers designed to amplify 18S rRNA in all eukaryotes. The Universal 18S Internal Standards function across the broadest range of organisms including plants, animals and many protozoa. The Classic I and Classic II 18S Internal Standards can be used with any vertebrate RNA sample. All 18S Internal Standards work well in multiplex RT-PCR. These kits also include control RNA and an Instruction Manual detailing the series of experiments needed to make relative RT-PCR data significant. For those researchers who have validated ß-actin as an appropriate internal control for their system, the Invitrogen™ QuantumRNA™ ß-actin Internal Standards are available.
Competitive RT-PCR precisely quantitates a message by comparing RT-PCR product signal intensity to a concentration curve generated by a synthetic competitor RNA sequence. The competitor RNA transcript is designed for amplification by the same primers and with the same efficiency as the endogenous target. The competitor produces a different-sized product so that it can be distinguished from the endogenous target product by gel analysis. The competitor is carefully quantitated and titrated into replicate RNA samples. Pilot experiments are used to find the range of competitor concentration where the experimental signal is most similar. Finally, the mass of product in the experimental samples is compared to the curve to determine the amount of a specific RNA present in the sample.
Some protocols use DNA competitors or random sequences for competitive RT-PCR. These competitors do not effectively control for variations in the RT reaction or for the amplification efficiency of the specific experimental sequence, as do RNA competitors.
While exquisitely sensitive, both relative and competitive methods of qRT-PCR have drawbacks. Relative RT-PCR requires extensive optimization to ensure that the PCR is terminated when both the gene of interest and an internal control are in the exponential phase of amplification. Competitive RT-PCR requires that an exogenous "competitor" be synthesized for each target to be analyzed. However, comparative RT-PCR achieves the same level of sensitivity as these standard methods of qRT-PCR, with significantly less optimization. Target mRNAs from 2 samples are assayed simultaneously, each serving as a competitor for the other, making it possible to compare the relative abundance of target between samples. Comparative RT-PCR is ideal for analyzing target genes discovered by screening methods such as array analysis and differential display.
Whether you choose to perform real-time, relative, competitive, or comparative RT-PCR, we offer products to simplify your RT-PCR experiments and make the data more quantitative. In addition to the specific Invitrogen™ products described above, we offer SuperTaq polymerase, M-MLV reverse transcriptase, and RNase-free PCR tubes. To prevent cross contamination during PCR experiments, we also offer DNAZap™ PCR DNA Degradation Solutions and RNase-free barrier pipette tips.
For a comprehensive list of publications discussing practically every aspect of real-time RT-PCR please visit www.wzw.tum.de/gene-quantification/real-time.html