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Evaluation of protocols for rRNA depletion-based...
Journal article

Evaluation of protocols for rRNA depletion-based RNA sequencing of nanogram inputs of mammalian total RNA

Abstract

Next generation RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) is a flexible approach that can be applied to a range of applications including global quantification of transcript expression, the characterization of RNA structure such as splicing patterns and profiling of expressed mutations. Many RNA-seq protocols require up to microgram levels of total RNA input amounts to generate high quality data, and thus remain impractical for the limited starting material amounts typically obtained from rare cell populations, such as those from early developmental stages or from laser micro-dissected clinical samples. Here, we present an assessment of the contemporary ribosomal RNA depletion-based protocols, and identify those that are suitable for inputs as low as 1-10 ng of intact total RNA and 100-500 ng of partially degraded RNA from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues.

Authors

Haile S; Corbett RD; Bilobram S; Mungall K; Grande BM; Kirk H; Pandoh P; MacLeod T; McDonald H; Bala M

Journal

PLOS ONE, Vol. 14, No. 10,

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Publication Date

October 31, 2019

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0224578

ISSN

1932-6203

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