CEL I endonuclease cleavage of heteroduplex DNA is noted as an efficient, high-throughput technique for scanning homologous sequences for subtle variations. A significant shortcoming of the CEL I technique, however, is the poor signal-to-noise ratio obtained when using a PCR-based, 5’-end-fluorophore-labelled detection platform. Normally, the sensitivity of fluorescent-based PAGE/CE is many fold superior to the UV visualization of intercalated dyes following agarose electrophoresis. Recent literature, however, reports that maximum pooling capacities are overall similar, when comparing sophisticated fluorophore-labelled detection platforms with more basic ethidium-stained techniques. CEL I has been hypothesized to reduce signal strength of end-labelled amplicon fragments via non-specific exonucleolytic activity, which acts to cleave off 5’-end bases and their covalently-linked fluorophores. Typical CEL I protocols involve only short digestion times in an attempt to limit the loss of true-nicked signal via any undesired exonucleolytic activity. Our research provides strong evidence to support the ‘exonucleolytic cleavage’ hypothesis on CEL I’s activity. We investigate alternative dye-labelling strategies and report a simple, improved technique for CEL I mutation scanning using an Applied Biosystems 3730 DNA Analyzer. Increased sensitivity is achieved, with higher throughputs being enabled via a greater capacity to pool amplified DNA. The CEL I-scanning protocol is suitable for detecting more than one unique mutant allele per pool. Our method was developed and tested in rice across a range of cultivars highly characterized for their SNP content in exon 8 of Starch Sythase IIa.
Conference presentation
A novel detection strategy for scanning multiple mutations using CEL I mismatch cleavage and capillary electrophoresis
Plant and Animal Genomes XV Conference (San Diego, California, USA, 13-17 January)
2007
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- A novel detection strategy for scanning multiple mutations using CEL I mismatch cleavage and capillary electrophoresis
- Creators
- Michael J Cross - Southern Cross UniversityDaniel LE Waters - Southern Cross UniversityL Slade Lee - Southern Cross UniversityRobert J Henry - Southern Cross University
- Conference
- Plant and Animal Genomes XV Conference (San Diego, California, USA, 13-17 January)
- Identifiers
- 1556; 991012822008802368
- Academic Unit
- Southern Cross Plant Science
- Resource Type
- Conference presentation