Protocol

Enrichment of Poly(A)+ mRNA Using Immobilized Oligo(dT)

Adapted from RNA: A Laboratory Manual, by Donald C. Rio, Manuel Ares Jr, Gregory J. Hannon, and Timothy W. Nilsen. CSHL Press, Cold Spring Harbor, NY, USA, 2010.

INTRODUCTION

This protocol describes a method for enrichment of poly(A)+ messenger RNA (mRNA) using immobilized oligo(dT). It takes advantage of the fact that the vast majority of eukaryotic mRNAs contain a 3′ tail of polyadenylic acid added post-transcriptionally. It relies on the ability of these tails to form stable hybrids with oligo(dT) under high-salt conditions. The hybrids are destabilized when salt is absent, allowing mRNAs to be recovered. This protocol is effective in removing the bulk of non-mRNA RNAs. A drawback of the technique is that it does not enrich for mRNAs that lack poly(A) tails (e.g., normal histone mRNAs or deadenylated mRNAs whose poly[A] tails have been removed during mRNA turnover). Several commercially available kits can be used for selection of poly(A)+ RNAs. However, they are expensive and do not perform any better than “homemade” reagents using (dT) cellulose. One obvious advantage of this method is that mRNAs are enriched ~50-fold. Accordingly, detection by Northern blotting or reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) is considerably more sensitive.

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