Whole-body scanning PCR, a tool for the visualization of the in vivo biodistribution pattern of endogenous and exogenous oligonucleotides in rodents

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Abstract

Characterizing the in vivo biodistribution pattern and relative expression levels of oligonucleotide-based molecules such as mRNA, miRNA, siRNA, and anti-miRNAs in animal models, could be a helpful firststep in the successful development of therapeutic oligonucleotides. Here we describe a simple procedure called “Whole-Body Scanning PCR” (WBS-PCR), which combines the power of PCR with that of imaging. WBS-PCR relies on 384 well-defined extractions across a mouse whole-body section followed by a single dilution step which renders the lysates compatible with various qPCR-based assays. The in vivo biodistribution maps are generated by deconvoluting the qPCR data and converting it into a TissueView compatible image file which can be overlaid with an image of the whole-body section used for extractions. WBS-PCR is a flexible platform that can be adapted to other detection systems and thereby further expand the use of this technology.

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Boos, J. A., & Beuvink, I. (2016). Whole-body scanning PCR, a tool for the visualization of the in vivo biodistribution pattern of endogenous and exogenous oligonucleotides in rodents. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 1372, pp. 99–111). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-3148-4_8

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