Advanced search×

Transcript amplification from single bacterium for transcriptome analysis.

Genes Dev 21(6):925-35 (2011) PMID 21536723 PMCID PMC3106325

Total transcript amplification (TTA) from single eukaryotic cells for transcriptome analysis is established, but TTA from a single prokaryotic cell presents additional challenges with much less starting material, the lack of poly(A)-tails, and the fact that the messages can be polycistronic. Here, we describe a novel method for single-bacterium TTA using a model organism, Burkholderia thailandensis, exposed to a subinhibitory concentration of the antibacterial agent, glyphosate. Utilizing a B. thailandensis microarray to assess the TTA method showed low fold-change bias (less than twofold difference and Pearson correlation coefficient R ≈ 0.87-0.89) and drop-outs (4%-6% of 2842 detectable genes), compared with data obtained from the larger-scale nonamplified RNA samples. Further analysis of the microarray data suggests that B. thailandensis, when exposed to the aromatic amino acid biosynthesis inhibitor glyphosate, induces (or represses) genes to possibly recuperate and balance the intracellular amino acid pool. We validated our single-cell microarray data at the multi-cell and single-cell levels with lacZ and gfp reporter-gene fusions, respectively. Sanger sequencing of 192 clones generated from the TTA product of a single cell, with and without enrichment by elimination of rRNA and tRNA, detected only B. thailandensis sequences with no contamination. These data indicate that RNA-seq of TTA from a single cell is possible using this novel method.

DOI: 10.1101/gr.116103.110
Version: za2963e q8za5 q8zbe q8zc0 q8zd8 q8ze5 q8zf8 q8zgd

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. Lineage-specific loss and divergence of functionally linked genes in eukaryotes.

    Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 97(21):11319-24 (2000) PMID 11016957 PMCID 17198

    We identified those genes that are conserved in S. pombe and nonfungal eukaryotes but are missing or highly diverged in the baker's yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Since the radiation from the common ancestor with S. pombe, S. cerevisiae appears to have lost about 300 genes, and about 300 more genes...
  2. HOW REYE'S CONFIGURATION HELPS IN PROVING THE BELL–KOCHEN–SPECKER THEOREM: A CURIOUS GEOMETRICAL TALE

    Found Phys Lett 13(6):499-519 (2000)

  3. Evidence for variation in abundance of antisense transcripts between multicellular animals but no relationship between antisense transcripti...

    Genes Dev 16(7):922-33 (2006) PMID 16769979 PMCID 1484459

    We used the same robust protocol to identify antisense transcripts in humans and five other metazoan genomes (mouse, rat, chicken, fruit fly, and nematode), and found that the estimated proportions of genes involved in antisense transcription are highly sensitive to the number of transcripts include...