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Gene expressions analysis by massively parallel signature sequencing (MPSS) on microbead arrays

Gene expressions analysis by massively parallel signature sequencing (MPSS) on microbead arrays. Sydney Brenner et al. Jan 26, 2007. DNA- basic definitions. Nucleotide (Base) - consists of a sugar, phosphate and a base Base-Pair Rule – Hydrogen bonds ( A-T, C-G)

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Gene expressions analysis by massively parallel signature sequencing (MPSS) on microbead arrays

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  1. Gene expressions analysis by massively parallel signature sequencing (MPSS) on microbead arrays Sydney Brenner et al. Jan 26, 2007

  2. DNA-basic definitions Nucleotide (Base) - consists of a sugar, phosphate and a base Base-Pair Rule – Hydrogen bonds (A-T, C-G) Gene - a segment of DNA that codes for a protein, which in turn codes for a trait (skin tone, eye color,…etc), a gene is a stretch of DNA. DNA Polymerase - Enzymes that catalyze the polymerization of deoxyribonucleotides alongside a DNA strand, which they "read" and use as a template. The newly-polymerized molecule is complementary to the template strand and identical to the template's partner strand.

  3. DNA Sequencing • Sequencing: determining the nucleotide order of a given DNA fragment, called the DNA sequence. • Sanger Method (’75): Chain termination • Prepare single strand DNA (heating) • Add a mixture of deoxy nucleotides (dATP, • dGTP, dCTP, dTTP) • Add a mixture of dideoxy nucleotides • (ddATP,ddGTP,ddCTP, ddTTP) • Add DNA polymerase I • A lot more deoxynucleotides than dideoxynucleotides • Sort based on length (gel) • Animation: http://www.dnalc.org/ddnalc/resources/sangerseq.html

  4. Restriction Enzymes • 1978 Nobel Prize in medicine (awarded to Werner • Arber, Daniel Nathans, and Hamilton Smith) • Enzymes that cut double stranded DNA • The cleaved chemical bonds can be reformed by • ligases • Restriction enzyme cuts only double-helical segments • that contain a particular nucleotide sequence (i.e. • recognition sequence) • Types of Restriction enzymes: I, II, III: • I,III: recognize specific sequences but the cleavage sites are at variable distances • II: cleavage occurs at specific sites at or close to the recognition sequence

  5. Fluorescence Activated Cell Sorting (FACS) First cell sorter: Mack Fulwyler (1965) Expanded by Len Herzenberg Cells are tagged by antibodies linked to fluorescent dye. The antibody is bound to a protein that is uniquely expressed in the cells that we want sorted. The nozzle vibrates to form drops which contain single cells Electrical charge is used to sort the cells

  6. Motivation Goals (upon determination of human genome): • To discover and understand the function and variation of genes • How do these qualities affect health and disease? Available techniques: • Hybridization of probes into microarrays • Advantages: large scale, capable of detecting a wide range of gene expression levels. • Disadvantages: variability due to probe hybridization, cross reactivity, element to element differences, and microarray to microarray differences • Counting of tags or signatures of DNA fragments • Advantages: Statistically more robust, don’t require standardization or repetition, precision and accuracy can be increased by increasing the size of the sample • Disadvantages: Difficult to realize routinely and not cost effective

  7. Massively Parallel Signature Sequencing (MPSS) Cloning on microbeads 1% of tags # of transcripts: 3-4e4 # of oligonucleotides: 1.67e7 # of conjugates: 5-7e11 We want to make sure that # of tags is at least a 100 times the number of templates this will ensure that if we take 1% of tags, we have a sample where all DNA’s are represented and they all have unique tags with at least 99% probability.

  8. Massively Parallel Signature Sequencing (MPSS) • PCR is used to amplify the sample. The resulting single stranded DNA’s are hybridized with a population of microbeads. (note: 1% of microbeads are loaded) • Separate loaded microbeads from unloaded ones using FACS. • Each microbead has a population of 104-105 identical copies of a single kind of template molecule

  9. Massively Parallel Signature Sequencing (MPSS)

  10. Decoding… 1 TNNN…Fx1 NTNN…Fx2 NNCN…Fx3 NNNC…Fx4 TTCC Ligate 1024 encoders 43 x 16 Decoders for Fx1…4 3 2 16x decoding per cycle….repeat

  11. Massively Parallel Signature Sequencing (MPSS)

  12. Massively Parallel Signature Sequencing (MPSS)

  13. Comparison to conventional methods Compared to PE Biosystems, model 377 DNA Sequencer

  14. Discussion • Method does not require separation of fragments to generate sequence information • Time series of spatially localized microbeads (can pack beads closely in monolayers) • The main advantage: parallel nature of the process-millions of templates can be handled together without need for separation. (Ideal for gene expression) • Conventional sequencing: analyze thousands of templates to give sequences with 100s of bases • MPSS: analyze millions of templates to give sequences of length few 10s of bases

  15. Critique Summary • Strong points: • A powerful and innovative technique • Lots of work done to prove the functionality • Weak points • Not the clearest paper (too much information compacted in a few sentences) • There are more efficient ways of encoding/decoding the adaptors • The figures are better shown in a different order • It would be good to include some more information about the cloning of the microbeads • I could use more comments on how good the results are (is it just me!?)

  16. Better encoding (Hansen’s method) . . . AAAT------------7 AAAG------------6,7 23 = 8 different encoders required as opposed to 16 used here.

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