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Deep mRNA Sequencing for In Vivo Functional Analysis of Cardiac Transcriptional Regulators
Author(s) -
Scot J. Matkovich,
Yan Zhang,
Derek J. Van Booven,
Gerald W. Dorn
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
circulation research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.899
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1524-4571
pISSN - 0009-7330
DOI - 10.1161/circresaha.110.217513
Subject(s) - biology , transcriptome , illumina dye sequencing , rna , deep sequencing , gene expression profiling , rna seq , computational biology , gene , dna sequencing , genetics , dna microarray , massive parallel sequencing , microarray , gene expression , genome
Rationale :Transcriptional profiling can detect subclinical heart disease and provide insight into disease etiology and functional status. Current microarray-based methods are expensive and subject to artifact.Objective :To develop RNA sequencing methodologies using next generation massively parallel platforms for high throughput comprehensive analysis of individual mouse cardiac transcriptomes. To compare the results of sequencing- and array-based transcriptional profiling in the well-characterized Gαq transgenic mouse hypertrophy/cardiomyopathy model.Methods and Results :The techniques for preparation of individually bar-coded mouse heart RNA libraries for Illumina Genome Analyzer II resequencing are described. RNA sequencing showed that 234 high-abundance transcripts (>60 copies/cell) comprised 55% of total cardiac mRNA. Parallel transcriptional profiling of Gαq transgenic and nontransgenic hearts by Illumina RNA sequencing and Affymetrix Mouse Gene 1.0 ST arrays revealed superior dynamic range for mRNA expression and enhanced specificity for reporting low-abundance transcripts by RNA sequencing. Differential mRNA expression in Gαq and nontransgenic hearts correlated well between microarrays and RNA sequencing for highly abundant transcripts. RNA sequencing was superior to arrays for accurately quantifying lower-abundance genes, which represented the majority of the regulated genes in the Gαq transgenic model.Conclusions :RNA sequencing is rapid, accurate, and sensitive for identifying both abundant and rare cardiac transcripts, and has significant advantages in time- and cost-efficiencies over microarray analysis.

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