Quantification of mRNA in single cells and modelling of RT-qPCR induced noise

<p style="text-align:justify;"> <b>Background:</b> Gene expression has a strong stochastic element resulting in highly variable mRNA levels between individual cells, even in a seemingly homogeneous cell population. Access to fundamental information about cellular mechani...

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Main Authors: Bengtsson, M, Hemberg, M, Rorsman, P, Ståhlberg, A
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: BioMed Central 2008
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author Bengtsson, M
Hemberg, M
Rorsman, P
Ståhlberg, A
author_facet Bengtsson, M
Hemberg, M
Rorsman, P
Ståhlberg, A
author_sort Bengtsson, M
collection OXFORD
description <p style="text-align:justify;"> <b>Background:</b> Gene expression has a strong stochastic element resulting in highly variable mRNA levels between individual cells, even in a seemingly homogeneous cell population. Access to fundamental information about cellular mechanisms, such as correlated gene expression, motivates measurements of multiple genes in individual cells. Quantitative reverse transcription PCR (RT-qPCR) is the most accessible method which provides sufficiently accurate measurements of mRNA in single cells.<br/><br/> <b>Results:</b> Low concentration of guanidine thiocyanate was used to fully lyse single pancreatic β-cells followed by RT-qPCR without the need for purification. The accuracy of the measurements was determined by a quantitative noise-model of the reverse transcription and PCR. The noise is insignificant for initial copy numbers &gt;100 while at lower copy numbers the noise intrinsic of the PCR increases sharply, eventually obscuring quantitative measurements. Importantly, the model allows us to determine the RT efficiency without using artificial RNA as a standard. The experimental setup was applied on single endocrine cells, where the technical and biological noise levels were determined.<br/><br/> <b>Conclusion:</b> Noise in single-cell RT-qPCR is insignificant compared to biological cell-to-cell variation in mRNA levels for medium and high abundance transcripts. To minimize the technical noise in single-cell RT-qPCR, the mRNA should be analyzed with a single RT reaction, and a single qPCR reaction per gene. </p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:938f57e9-46c7-4026-a0eb-aa26393171d52022-03-26T23:33:09ZQuantification of mRNA in single cells and modelling of RT-qPCR induced noiseJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:938f57e9-46c7-4026-a0eb-aa26393171d5EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordBioMed Central2008Bengtsson, MHemberg, MRorsman, PStåhlberg, A <p style="text-align:justify;"> <b>Background:</b> Gene expression has a strong stochastic element resulting in highly variable mRNA levels between individual cells, even in a seemingly homogeneous cell population. Access to fundamental information about cellular mechanisms, such as correlated gene expression, motivates measurements of multiple genes in individual cells. Quantitative reverse transcription PCR (RT-qPCR) is the most accessible method which provides sufficiently accurate measurements of mRNA in single cells.<br/><br/> <b>Results:</b> Low concentration of guanidine thiocyanate was used to fully lyse single pancreatic β-cells followed by RT-qPCR without the need for purification. The accuracy of the measurements was determined by a quantitative noise-model of the reverse transcription and PCR. The noise is insignificant for initial copy numbers &gt;100 while at lower copy numbers the noise intrinsic of the PCR increases sharply, eventually obscuring quantitative measurements. Importantly, the model allows us to determine the RT efficiency without using artificial RNA as a standard. The experimental setup was applied on single endocrine cells, where the technical and biological noise levels were determined.<br/><br/> <b>Conclusion:</b> Noise in single-cell RT-qPCR is insignificant compared to biological cell-to-cell variation in mRNA levels for medium and high abundance transcripts. To minimize the technical noise in single-cell RT-qPCR, the mRNA should be analyzed with a single RT reaction, and a single qPCR reaction per gene. </p>
spellingShingle Bengtsson, M
Hemberg, M
Rorsman, P
Ståhlberg, A
Quantification of mRNA in single cells and modelling of RT-qPCR induced noise
title Quantification of mRNA in single cells and modelling of RT-qPCR induced noise
title_full Quantification of mRNA in single cells and modelling of RT-qPCR induced noise
title_fullStr Quantification of mRNA in single cells and modelling of RT-qPCR induced noise
title_full_unstemmed Quantification of mRNA in single cells and modelling of RT-qPCR induced noise
title_short Quantification of mRNA in single cells and modelling of RT-qPCR induced noise
title_sort quantification of mrna in single cells and modelling of rt qpcr induced noise
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AT rorsmanp quantificationofmrnainsinglecellsandmodellingofrtqpcrinducednoise
AT stahlberga quantificationofmrnainsinglecellsandmodellingofrtqpcrinducednoise