Quantitative PCR
ABSTRACT
Quantitative PCR involves co-amplification of two templates: a constant amount of a preparation containing the desired target sequence and varying amounts of a reference template. After amplification, the concentration of the target sequence in the preparation of nucleic acid under test is established by interpolation into a standard curve. Quantitation of nucleic acids by PCR is best performed by real-time PCR. However, the following robust protocol, which uses radioactivity to quantify PCRproducts, remains useful when a real-time instrument is unavailable. The method can be easily adapted to other methods of quantification such as fluorometry.
MATERIALS
Reagents and Solutions
Chloroform dNTP solution (pH 8.0), containing all four deoxynucleotide triphosphates, each at a concentration of 20 mM MgCl2 (1 M) Placental RNase inhibitor (20 units/µl)
Enzymes and Buffers
Appropriate restriction enzymes and 10x buffers Bacteriophage T4 DNA ligase and 10x buffer Reverse transcriptase, required only if RNA is used as a template Thermostable DNA polymerase and 10x amplification buffer as supplied by the manufacturer or homemade 500 mM KCl 100 mM Tris-Cl (pH 8.3, room temperature) 15 mM MgCl2
Nucleic Acids/Oligonucleotides
DNAmarkers for gel electrophoresis Externally added reference (either DNA or RNA) of known concentration Use a DNA reference to measure the concentration of DNA sequences and, if possible, an RNA reference for RNA targets. A method to construct reference RNA is described in Protocol 15.2. Sense and antisense primers, each 20 M in H2O There is nothing unusual about the primers used in quantitative PCR. The standard rules for primer design apply. Target nucleic acid The target can be a preparation of DNA or RNA, either total or poly(A)+. Dissolve preparations of total RNA in H2O at a concentration of 0.5-1.0 mg/ml and preparations of poly(A)+ RNA at 10-100 µg/ml. Dissolve DNA targets in 10 mM Tris-Cl (pH 7.6) at the following concentrations:mammalian genomic DNA, 100 µg/ml; yeast genomic DNA, 1 µg/ml; bacterial genomic DNA, 0.1 µg/ml; and plasmid DNA, 1-5 ng/ml.
Radiolabeled Compounds
[α-32]dCTP (sp. act. 3000 Ci/mmole at 10 mCi/ml) Gels/Loading Buffers Polyacrylamide or agarose gel
Additional Items
Barrier tips for automatic pipettor Fluorometer (optional; see Step 1) Light mineral oil or wax bead (optional; see Step 5) Materials for autoradiography or phosphorimaging Microtiter plates or microfuge tubes, 0.5 ml and thin walled Positive displacement pipette Thermal cycler, programmed with desired amplification protocol Water baths (94℃and, for RNA templates only, 75℃)
METHOD
Design and prepare a reference template suitable for the task at hand. Measure the concentration of the reference template as carefully as possible, preferably by fluorometry. Alternatively, estimate the amount of reference template after gel electrophoresis and ethidium bromide staining.
Make a series of tenfold dilutions (in H2O) containing concentrations of the reference template ranging from 10-6 to 10-12 M. After using the dilutions (Step 3), they should be stored at -70℃ for later use in Step 8.