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Real-time PCR Goes Prime Time
Real-time PCR assays used for quantitative RT-PCR
combine the best attributes of both relative and competitive (end-point)
RT-PCR in that they are accurate, precise, capable of high throughput,
and relatively easy to perform.
To truly appreciate the benefits of this technology,
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. Exactly when 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. As more labs and core facilities acquire
the instrumentation required for real-time analysis, this technique
may become the dominant RT-PCR-based quantitation technique.
Real-time Reporters: SYBR® Green, TaqMan®,
and Molecular Beacons
All real-time PCR systems rely upon the detection
and quantitation of a fluorescent reporter, the signal of which
increases in direct proportion to the amount of PCR product in a
reaction. In the simplest and most economical format, that reporter
is the double-strand DNA-specific dye SYBR® Green (Molecular
Probes). 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's 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.
The two most popular alternatives to SYBR Green
are TaqMan® and molecular beacons, both of which are hybridization
probes relying on fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)
for quantitation.
TaqMan Probes are oligonucleotides that contain
a fluorescent dye, typically on the 5' base, and a quenching dye,
typically located on the 3' base. When irradiated, the excited fluorescent
dye transfers energy to the nearby quenching dye molecule rather
than fluorescing, resulting in a nonfluorescent substrate. TaqMan
probes are designed to hybridize to an internal region of a PCR
product. During PCR, when the polymerase replicates a template on
which a TaqMan probe is bound, the 5' exonuclease activity of the
polymerase cleaves the probe. This separates the fluorescent and
quenching dyes and FRET no longer occurs. Fluorescence increases
in each cycle, proportional to the rate of probe cleavage.
Molecular beacons also contain fluorescent and
quenching dyes, but FRET only occurs when the quenching dye is directly
adjacent to the fluorescent dye. Molecular beacons are designed
to adopt a hairpin structure while free in solution, bringing the
fluorescent dye and quencher in close proximity. 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. 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.
Real-time Reporters for Multiplex PCR
TaqMan probes and molecular beacons 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.
Taqman vs. SYBR Green: The Data
An example of the precision and accuracy of real-time
RT-PCR is shown in Figure 1. Panels A and B (left) are the amplification
profiles of serial 107-fold dilutions of a cDNA synthesis reaction
(107 fold range), amplified with Ambion's QuantumRNA™ 18S
Universal primers and detected by either SYBR Green (panel A) or
TaqMan (panel B) chemistries. Standard curves for both are shown
on the right. The only practical difference between the performance
of these two methods is the occasional presence of a false signal
late in the SYBR Green amplification. This usually corresponds to
a signal lower than that expected from femtograms of RNA, and is
of little consequence to accuracy except if a target RNA is extremely
rare.
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| Figure 1. Precision
and Accuacy of Real-Time RT-PCR. 18S
rRNA amplification profiles and standard curves generated
using A) SYBR Green, and B) TaqMan chemistries. |
Investing in the Real-Time Technique
Real-time PCR requires an instrumentation platform
that consists of a thermal cycler, 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 cheap, currently about $60-$95K,
but are well within purchasing reach of core facilities or labs
that have the need for high throughput quantitative analysis.
Supporting Products
Ambion has many products useful for real-time
RT-PCR and that are routinely used for such analysis at Ambion in
the ABI PRISM® 7700 Sequence Detection System.
Ambion's RETROscript™
Kit is a versatile and robust reverse transcription kit containing
M-MLV enzyme, buffers and dNTPs for reverse transcription, and
both oligo(dT) and random primers. A control RNA and primers are
also supplied with the kit. SuperTaq™
DNA Polymerase is a thermostable polymerase for amplification
of products up to 1 kb. For longer amplification products, SuperTaq
Plus™ is recommended. Both are supplied with a buffer with and
without MgCl2 and a separate tube of MgCl2 for
Mg2+ optimization, as well as dNTPs.
RNAqueous™-4PCR and RNAqueous™-96 are
RNA isolation kits specifically designed for high throughput of
small samples for RT-PCR applications. Both contain Ambion's RNase-free
DNase I. These products are described in more detail in "RNA
Isolation for RT-PCR". DNA-free™ can
be used to remove contaminating DNA from RNA preparations made using
your own isolation protocol, without phenol extraction, heating
or precipitation. 96-well PCR plates and optically
clear strip caps are also available.
All of the above mentioned products are compatible
with SYBR Green, TaqMan, and molecular beacon chemistries. In addition,
the QuantumRNA 18S
Universal and ß-actin standards
work well with SYBR Green chemistry, and a QuantumRNA 18S
universal TaqMan probe sequence is available from Technical
Service upon request.
SYBR is a registered trademark of Molecular Probes.
TaqMan is a registered trademark of Roche Molecular Systems.
ABI PRISM is a registered trademark of PE Applied Biosystems.
| Cat# |
Product Name |
Size |
| AM1710 |
RETROscript® Kit |
40 rxns |
| AM1906 |
DNA-free™ |
50 rxns |
| AM1914 |
RNAqueous®-4PCR Kit |
30 rxns |
| AM1920 |
RNAqueous®-96 Kit |
192 purifications |
| AM2050 |
SuperTaq™ Polymerase (Cloned) 5 U/µl |
50 U |
| AM2052 |
SuperTaq™ Polymerase (Cloned) 5 U/µl |
250 U |
| AM2054 |
SuperTaq™ Plus Polymerase (Cloned) 5 U/µl |
50 U |
| AM2056 |
SuperTaq™ Plus Polymerase (Cloned) 5 U/µl |
250 U |
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