Abstract
We describe an ultra-rapid and sensitive method to quantify gene expression levels in cultured cells. The procedure is based on reverse-transcription quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) directly from cells, without RNA extraction and without an isothermal reverse-transcription step. Human neurons (Lund human mesencephalic cells) were lysed at different stages of differentiation, and the lysates were used directly as template for the combined RT-qPCR reaction. We detected a down-regulation of a proliferation marker and an up-regulation of neuronal dopaminergic genes expression. We were able to detect the reference gene target from as few as a single cell, demonstrating the application of the method for efficient amplification from small cell numbers. The data were fully in line with those obtained by the standard two-step RT-qPCR from the extracted total RNA. Our 'zero-step' RT-qPCR method proved to be simple and reliable with a total time from cell lysis to the end of the qPCR as short as 1.5 h. It is therefore particularly suitable for RT-qPCRs where large numbers of samples must be handled, or where data are required within short time.
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CITATION STYLE
Chovancova, P., Merk, V., Marx, A., Leist, M., & Kranaster, R. (2017). Reverse-transcription quantitative PCR directly from cells without RNA extraction and without isothermal reverse-transcription: A “zero-step” RT-qPCR protocol. Biology Methods and Protocols, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1093/biomethods/bpx008
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