Endogenous gene selection for relative quantification PCR and IL6 transcript levels in the PBMC's of severe and non-severe dengue cases

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Abstract

Objectives: Dengue viral infection ranges from dengue fever to dengue haemorrhagic fever and lethal dengue shock syndrome. Currently no means are available to monitor the progression of disease. Real time PCR based gene expression analyses are used to find potential molecular markers for effective prediction of dengue clinical outcome. The accuracy of qPCR analysis is strongly dependent on transcript normalization using stably expressed endogenous genes, which if selected imprecisely can lead to misinterpreted results. We aimed to determine the best fit for endogenous gene among six genes namely COX, ACTB, GAPDH, HMBS, HPRT and B2M for dengue viral infection cases. Gene stability was inferred from qPCR data by normalizing with two algorithms geNorm and Normfinder and the rankings generated were validated by gene expression analysis against target gene IL-6. Results: Both the algorithms showed ACTB, HPRT, GAPDH as most stable genes. Normalizing with the stable genes revealed a significant fold change (p

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Kumar, V. E., Cherupanakkal, C., Catherine, M., Kadhiravan, T., Parameswaran, N., Rajendiran, S., & Pillai, A. B. (2018). Endogenous gene selection for relative quantification PCR and IL6 transcript levels in the PBMC’s of severe and non-severe dengue cases. BMC Research Notes, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13104-018-3620-2

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