We propose further applications of kinetic PCR-based methods for accurate and reproducible nucleic acid quantitation. We have shown that the kRT-PCR (kinetically-monitored reverse transcription-initiated PCR) assay accurately quantitates transcript levels across the entire physiologic range of abundance using total cellular RNA as template and transcript- specific primer pairs. Similarly, we have evidence that k-PCR (kinetically- monitored PCR) can be used to accurately score single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) directly, eliminating post-PCR processing with gels, hybridization, or ELISA. KTC reactions are robotically assembled and utilize a thermostable DNA polymerase. computer-controlled digital camera monitors the cyclewise kinetics of product accumulation by fluorescence. Digital image analysis provides for full computer data handling. initial template concentrations are computed from the kinetics of PCR product accumulation. Previous results show that the kRT-PCR assay quantitates transcript level differences between two physiological or genetic states within a factor of 20%. Absolute mRNA levels are quantitated by kRT-PCR assay within a factor of two. Single nucleotide primer/template mismatches cause a 6 to 12 PCR cycle delay in the kinetics of PCR product accumulation. The magnitude of this latter primer/template discrimination readily supports accurate SNP allele frequencies determinations using DNA-templated kinetic PCR assays. Experiments are proposed to increase throughput by further improvements to automation of reaction assembly, assay quality assurance, primer design, and data analysis. Approaches are proposed to develop a larger capacity KTC instrument for applications that require performing very large numbers of assays. The Experimental Plan also includes application of the kinetic RT-PCR assays for genetic dissection of transcription paths and regulatory networks within the yeast transcription factors and identification of regulatory paths from the yeast transcriptional factors to target genes. Finally, experiments are proposed to develop and assess the capability of kinetic PCR assays for SNP-based linkage or linkage disequilibrium analyses of human DNAs. The accuracy, high sensitivity, wide detection range, and flexibility of kinetic PCR assays enable this technology to address a wide range of genomics-based analyses.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HG001736-05
Application #
6499102
Study Section
Genome Study Section (GNM)
Program Officer
Feingold, Elise A
Project Start
1997-09-30
Project End
2003-01-31
Budget Start
2002-02-01
Budget End
2003-01-31
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
$363,426
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California Davis
Department
Biochemistry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
094878337
City
Davis
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
95618
Graham, Kenneth J; Holland, Michael J (2005) PrimerSelect: a transcriptome-wide oligonucleotide primer pair design program for kinetic RT-PCR-based transcript profiling. Methods Enzymol 395:544-53
Kaplan, Craig D; Holland, Michael J; Winston, Fred (2005) Interaction between transcription elongation factors and mRNA 3'-end formation at the Saccharomyces cerevisiae GAL10-GAL7 locus. J Biol Chem 280:913-22
Xu, Eugenia Y; Bi, Xin; Holland, Michael J et al. (2005) Mutations in the nucleosome core enhance transcriptional silencing. Mol Cell Biol 25:1846-59
Watson, Robert M; Griaznova, Olga I; Long, Christopher M et al. (2004) Increased sample capacity for genotyping and expression profiling by kinetic polymerase chain reaction. Anal Biochem 329:58-67
Holland, Michael J (2002) Transcript abundance in yeast varies over six orders of magnitude. J Biol Chem 277:14363-6
Vibat, C R; Holland, M J; Kang, J J et al. (2001) Quantitation of Na+-K+-2Cl- cotransport splice variants in human tissues using kinetic polymerase chain reaction. Anal Biochem 298:218-30
Kang, J; Holland, M; Jones, H et al. (1999) Coordinate augmentation in expression of genes encoding transcription factors and liver secretory proteins in hypo-oncotic states. Kidney Int 56:452-60