Novel method for high-throughput colony PCR screening in nanoliter-reactors
Author(s) -
Marcel Walser,
René Pellaux,
Andreas Meyer,
Matthias Bechtold,
Hervé Vanderschuren,
Richard Reinhardt,
Joseph Magyar,
Sven Panke,
Martin Held
Publication year - 2009
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/gkp160
Subject(s) - biology , consumables , dna sequencing , computational biology , digital polymerase chain reaction , high throughput screening , throughput , deep sequencing , dna , polymerase chain reaction , genetics , genome , computer science , gene , operating system , marketing , business , wireless
We introduce a technology for the rapid identification and sequencing of conserved DNA elements employing a novel suspension array based on nanoliter (nl)-reactors made from alginate. The reactors have a volume of 35 nl and serve as reaction compartments during monoseptic growth of microbial library clones, colony lysis, thermocycling and screening for sequence motifs via semi-quantitative fluorescence analyses. nl-Reactors were kept in suspension during all high-throughput steps which allowed performing the protocol in a highly space-effective fashion and at negligible expenses of consumables and reagents. As a first application, 11 high-quality microsatellites for polymorphism studies in cassava were isolated and sequenced out of a library of 20 000 clones in 2 days. The technology is widely scalable and we envision that throughputs for nl-reactor based screenings can be increased up to 100 000 and more samples per day thereby efficiently complementing protocols based on established deep-sequencing technologies
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