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Real Time PCR = Quantitative PCR
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Measure / compare the quantity of (DNA) molecules of interest
Goal of Q-PCR: Measure / compare the quantity of (DNA) molecules of interest by PCR on cDNA = compare transcription level of a target gene between different samples (RT-PCR) on genomic DNA= measure the copy number of a genomic target sequence
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Measure/ compare the quantity of (DNA) molecules of interest
Goal of Q-PCR: Measure/ compare the quantity of (DNA) molecules of interest by PCR Find a way to quantify very precisely the quantity of PCR products To be sure to compare PCR products during the exponential phase to have a direct proportionality between the signal and the target quantity = 2 times more product / cycle
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Sequence specific probe
2 technical alternatives for precise detection of PCR product : Sequence specific probe Sybr green
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Sequence Specific Probe = Taqman probe R Q
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Other kinds of probes MGB (Minor Group Binding) probes:
same as Taqman probe (with a R and Q) but with a MGB group added at the 5’end of the probe in addition to R, to increase the binding affinity for DNA (increase of the probe Tm) LNA (Locked Nucleic Acid) probe: same as Taqman probe but with modified nucleotides having high affinity for DNA Molecular Beacons: same as Taqman probe but designed to have complementary ends. When the probe is not bound to the target, the 2 ends anneal together and form a stem-loop structure that bring closer the R and Q (--> reduction of the background). FRET (Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer) probes: 2 labeled probes that bind to the PCR product in a head-to-tail fashion. When the probes bind to the template, their fluorophores come into close proximity, allowing energy transfer from a donor to an acceptor fluorophore (FRET probes are not cleaved during reaction) Q R R1 R2 transfer excitation emission
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Sybr green
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2 products of amplification
Additional control for sybr green PCR = dissociation curve So you can design new (more specific) primers or use a taqman probe to increase the specificity of your reaction. Indeed, a non-specific reaction is very often due to a bad primers design. 1 product of amplification 2 products of amplification
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Measure/ compare the quantity of (DNA) molecules of interest
Goal of Q-PCR: Measure/ compare the quantity of (DNA) molecules of interest by PCR Find a way to quantify very precisely the quantity of PCR products To be sure to compare PCR products during the exponential phase to have a direct proportionality between the signal and the target quantity = 2 times more product / cycle
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Real time PCR Exponential phase plateau Only during exponential phase, the fluorescent signal emitted by the probe (or Sybr green) reflects the increasing amount of PCR product To be sure to compare signal, from sample to sample, during exponential phase, we measure the signal at each cycle and choose, a posteriori, the optimal cycle number for comparison
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Measure/ compare the quantity of (DNA) molecules of interest
Goal of Q-PCR: Measure/ compare the quantity of (DNA) molecules of interest by PCR Find a way to quantify very precisely the quantity of PCR products To be sure to compare PCR products during the exponential phase to have a direct proportionality between the signal and the target quantity = 2 times more product / cycle PCR 100% efficient
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To have PCR reaction 100% efficient = to have good amplicons
To do Q-PCR you need: To have PCR reaction 100% efficient = to have good amplicons
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On way to have a PCR reaction 100 % efficient
is to have PCR cycles as short as possible The most delicate step of a Q-PCR reaction is the design of the primers and probe that have to match different parameters to give the most efficient PCR reaction. These parameters depend on the unusual cycle of reaction that have very short steps but above all where annealing and elongation take place at the step and at 60°C
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Design of primers and Taqman probe
-Amplicon length: as short as possible (50 to 80n is ideal. Up to 100n for taqman assays is Ok) -Fix one Tm for all the primers = 58°C < Tm < 60°C -Primers lenght: around 20 n (from 15 to 30 is Ok) -Taqman probe Tm must be 10°C greater that PCR primers should not begin with G The most delicate step of a Q-PCR reaction is the design of the primers and probe that have to match different parameters to give the most efficient PCR reaction. These parameters depend on the unusual cycle of reaction that have very short steps but above all where annealing and elongation take place at the step and at 60°C We use the Primer Express software (Applied Biosystems) for the design of Taqman and Sybr green amplicons
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Additional parameters:
- On cDNA: the amplicon overlapping an exon-exon junction to prevent amplification of genomic DNA cDNA ex 1 ex 1 ex 1 ex 1 ex 2 ex 2 ex 2 ex 2 ex 3 ex 3 ex 3 genomic DNA genomic DNA genomic DNA genomic DNA ex 1 ex 1 ex 1 ex 1 intron 1 intron 1 intron 1 intron 1 ex 2 ex 2 ex 2 ex 2
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Additional parameters:
- on cDNA: the amplicon overlaps an exon-exon junction to prevent amplification of genomic DNA Additional parameters: - design in 3’ of the cDNA when the RT is primed with oligo d(T) primer - check by blast if the amplicon selected shows homolgies to other molecules present in the reaction mixture (other mRNA - genomic DNA…)
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How to test PCR reaction efficiency?
by serial dilution of DNA and checking of proportionality between signal and performed dilutions
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Ct: number of cycles required to reach the threshold
Amplification curves Threshold Ct Threshold: arbitrary fixed level of fluoresence (somewhere in the exponential phase of amplification) Ct: number of cycles required to reach the threshold
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Cp for systems that use the « second derivative Maximum method »
This method identifies the point where the fluorescence curve turns sharply upward the cycle where the second derivative is at its maximum is in the middle of the exponential phase
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Ct or Cp or Cq These Cq reflects the quantity of target of interest
and can be compared between samples
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Fold dilution 1 X 4 X What is a good amplicon? 16 X 64 X The efficiency of the amplification is calculated by establishing a standard curve (Ct= f(quantity)) When the slope of the standard curve is -3.33, the efficiency = 2 ( 100%) (10-1/slope) = efficiency Slope = Efficiency = 1.98 ( %)
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To do Q-PCR you need: To have good amplicons To have good samples
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Classical experimental design:
To compare the quantity of target between 2 different conditions Ex: mutant vs wt
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Relative quantification
Classical experimental design: To compare the quantity of target between 2 different conditions Ex: mutant vs wt Relative quantification
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Classical experimental design:
To compare the quantity of target between 2 different conditions Ex: mutant vs wt Genomic quantification Expression analysis
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Genomic quantification
Experimental design Genomic quantification To quantify the number of transgene insertions To select cells that have lost 1 copy of the gene of interest CNV Chromatin immuno-precipitation analysis
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Genomic quantification
Experimental design Genomic quantification Clean DNA need to have several lines of reference (with known number of copies)
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Expression analysis Experimental design
RNA of good quality (checked with the bioanalyzer - RIN > 7)
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Expression analysis Experimental design
RNA of good quality (checked with the bioanalyzer - RIN > 7) Do sample replicates: at least 3 biological replicates + 3 technical replicates (=PCR replicates) Be as homogenous as possible ex: cell culture conditions have to be very standardized (use the same medium…) ex: always compare animals of same age, same parents, same sex… do paired comparisons if needed
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To work very precisely during PCR assembly
To do Q-PCR you need: To have good amplicons To have good samples To work very precisely during PCR assembly - do as much as Master Mix as possible … - liquid handling robots - PCR machines for 384 well plates Rq: if you can’t analyze all your PCR reactions on the same plate, separate between genes, not between samples (for the same gene) - otherwise, duplicate some samples.
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To work very precisely during PCR assembly
To do Q-PCR you need: To have good amplicons To have good samples To work very precisely during PCR assembly To have a good method of analysis (normalization method)
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DDCt Method Normalization step DCt Target gene House keeping gene
Sample 1 Sample 2 House keeping gene Sample 1 Sample 2 26 27 27 28 DCt Sample 1 DCt = 26-27= -1 Sample 2 DCt = 27-28= -1
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Sample 2 vs Sample = 2-DDCt = 1
DDCt Method Enrichment factor Target gene Sample 1 Sample 2 House keeping gene Sample 1 Sample 2 26 27 27 28 DCt DDCt Sample 1 DCt = 26-27= -1 Sample 2 vs Sample 1 = 0 Enrichment factor Sample 2 DCt = 27-28= -1 Sample 2 vs Sample = 2-DDCt = 1
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Disavantages of the method:
imposes that normalization and target genes efficiencies are equal to 2 takes in account only 1 house keeping gene
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GeNorm method (Genome Biology, Vandesompele et al., 2002)
Advanges: the real amplification efficiency is taken in account several house keeping genes (HKG) can be used for the normalization proposes an algorythm that selects the most stable HKG
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For each new sample conditions, we test at least 4 HKG (6 is best), and we keep the most stable ones according to GeNorm (at least 3)
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Real-time PCR as validating method for microarrays
ideal method to validate candidates identified by microarrays experiment -furthermore, Q-PCR is more sensitive than microarrays
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Goal: to determine the exact number of template in the sample
Absolute quantification Ct Goal: to determine the exact number of template in the sample -synthesis of a external reference = - target synthesized in vitro -determine the exact quantity of synthetized molecules (by spectrophotometry) -do serial dilutions of the reference -(RT)-PCR on the serial dilution of the reference -draw a standard curve for the reference with the exact quantity on the X axis and the Ct on the Y axis Ct -report the Ct obtained for the sample on the standard curve exact quantity
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