Transcriptome: special techniques, RNA-Seq, GRO-Seq, CAGE, others.
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RNA-seq
Transcriptome Analysis is the study of the transcriptome, of the complete set of RNA transcripts that are produced by the genome, under specific circumstances or in a specific cell, using high-throughput methods.
Transcriptome analysis by next-generation (RNA-seq) sequencing allows investigation of a transcriptome at unsurpassed resolution, detecting both coding and regulatory transcripts, like siRNA and lncRNA. One major benefit is that RNA-seq is independent of a priori knowledge on the sequence under investigation, thereby also allowing analysis of poorly characterized species.Brief outline of the workflow:
- bulk RNA is extracted from the sample and the desired RNA is selected (sample preparation)
- the selected RNA is copied into stable double-stranded copy DNA (library construction)
- the ds cDNA is then sequenced using various sequencing methods
- the sequences obtained can are aligned to reference genome sequences, available in data banks, to identify which genes are transcribed. This type of analysis provides a quantification of the expression levels for the transcribed genes. Alternatively, RNA-seq can be used to identify alternative splicing, novel transcripts, and fusion genes, following a new transcript discovery approach.
The complete workflow of RNA-seq consists of: (1) experimental design; (2) sample and library preparation; (3) sequencing; and (4) data analysis. You will find a general explanation of each step in the following video.
For a deeper understanding of the RNA-seq technology and its applications follow these links:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4648566/