17 research outputs found

    An on-bead tailing/ligation approach for sequencing resin-bound RNA libraries

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    Nucleic acids possess the unique property of being enzymatically amplifiable, and have therefore been a popular choice for the combinatorial selection of functional sequences, such as aptamers or ribozymes. However, amplification typically requires known sequence segments that serve as primer binding sites, which can be limiting for certain applications, like the screening of on-bead libraries. Here, we report a method to amplify and sequence on-bead RNA libraries that requires not more than five known nucleotides. A key element is the attachment of the starting nucleoside to the synthesis resin via the nucleobase, which leaves the 3′-OH group accessible to subsequent enzymatic manipulations. After split-and-mix synthesis of the oligonucleotide library and deprotection, a poly(A)-tail can be efficiently added to this free 3′-hydroxyl terminus by Escherichia coli poly(A) polymerase that serves as an anchored primer binding site for reverse transcription. The cDNA is joined to a DNA adapter by T4 DNA ligase. PCR amplification yielded single-band products that could be cloned and sequenced starting from individual polystyrene beads. The method described here makes the selection of functional RNAs from on-bead RNA libraries more attractive due to increased flexibility in library design, higher yields of full-length sequence on bead and robust sequence determination

    Characterization of Transcription Start Sites of Putative Non-coding RNAs by Multifaceted Use of Massively Paralleled Sequencer

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    On the basis of integrated transcriptome analysis, we show that not all transcriptional start site clusters (TSCs) in the intergenic regions (iTSCs) have the same properties; thus, it is possible to discriminate the iTSCs that are likely to have biological relevance from the other noise-level iTSCs. We used a total of 251 933 381 short-read sequence tags generated from various types of transcriptome analyses in order to characterize 6039 iTSCs, which have significant expression levels. We analyzed and found that 23% of these iTSCs were located in the proximal regions of the RefSeq genes. These RefSeq-linked iTSCs showed similar expression patterns with the neighboring RefSeq genes, had widely fluctuating transcription start sites and lacked ordered nucleosome positioning. These iTSCs seemed not to form independent transcriptional units, simply representing the by-products of the neighboring RefSeq genes, in spite of their significant expression levels. Similar features were also observed for the TSCs located in the antisense regions of the RefSeq genes. Furthermore, for the remaining iTSCs that were not associated with any RefSeq genes, we demonstrate that integrative interpretation of the transcriptome data provides essential information to specify their biological functions in the hypoxic responses of the cells

    Identification of a large noncoding RNA in extremophilic eubacteria

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    We have discovered a large and highly conserved RNA motif that typically resides in a noncoding section of a multigene messenger RNA in extremophilic Gram-positive eubacteria. RNAs of this class adopt an ornate secondary structure, are large compared with most other noncoding RNAs, and have been identified only in certain extremophilic bacteria. These ornate, large, extremophilic (OLE) RNAs have a length of ≈610 nucleotides, and the 35 representatives examined exhibit extraordinary conservation of nucleotide sequence and base pairing. Structural probing of the OLE RNA from Bacillus halodurans corroborates a complex secondary structure model predicted from comparative sequence analysis. The patterns of structural conservation, and its unique phylogenetic distribution, suggest that OLE RNA carries out a complex and critical function only in certain extremophilic bacteria
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