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GREM, a technique for genome-wide isolation and quantitative analysis of promoter active repeats
Author(s) -
Anton Buzdin,
Elena Alexandrova,
Elena Gogvadze,
E. D. Sverdlov
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkl335
Subject(s) - biology , long terminal repeat , genome , complementary dna , genetics , promoter , human genome , amplicon , genomic library , endogenous retrovirus , cdna library , cloning (programming) , computational biology , microbiology and biotechnology , gene , polymerase chain reaction , gene expression , peptide sequence , computer science , programming language
We developed a technique called GREM (Genomic Repeat Expression Monitor) that can be applied to genome-wide isolation and quantitative analysis of any kind of transcriptionally active repetitive elements. Briefly, the technique includes three major stages: (i) generation of a transcriptome wide library of cDNA 5' terminal fragments, (ii) selective amplification of repeat-flanking genomic loci and (iii) hybridization of the cDNA library (i) to the amplicon (ii) with subsequent selective amplification and cloning of the cDNA-genome hybrids. The sequences obtained serve as 'tags' for promoter active repetitive elements. The advantage of GREM is an unambiguous mapping of individual promoter active repeats at a genome-wide level. We applied GREM for genome-wide experimental identification of human-specific endogenous retroviruses and their solitary long terminal repeats (LTRs) acting in vivo as promoters. Importantly, GREM tag frequencies linearly correlated with the corresponding LTR-driven transcript levels found using RT-PCR. The GREM technique enabled us to identify 54 new functional human promoters created by retroviral LTRs.

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