BioTechniques (Nov 2001)

Removal of PolyA Tails from Full-Length cDNA Libraries for High-Efficiency Sequencing

  • Y. Shibata,
  • P. Carninci,
  • K. Sato,
  • N. Hayatsu,
  • T. Shiraki,
  • Y. Ishii,
  • T. Arakawa,
  • A. Hara,
  • N. Ohsato,
  • M. Izawa,
  • K. Aizawa,
  • M. Itoh,
  • K. Shibata,
  • A. Shinagawa,
  • J. Kawai,
  • Y. Ota,
  • S. Kikuchi,
  • N. Kishimoto,
  • M. Muramatsu,
  • Y. Hayashizaki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2144/01315st04
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31, no. 5
pp. 1042 – 1049

Abstract

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We have developed a method to overcome sequencing problems caused by the presence of homopolymer stretches, such as polyA/T, in cDNA libraries. PolyA tails are shortened by cleaving before cDNA cloning with type IIS restriction enzymes, such as GsuI, placed next to the oligo-dT used to prime the polyA tails of mRNAs. We constructed four rice Cap-Trapper-selected, full-length normalized cDNA libraries, of which the average residual polyA tail was 4 bases or shorter in most of the clones analyzed. Because of the removal of homopolymeric stretches, libraries prepared with this method can be used for direct sequencing and transcriptional sequencing without the slippage observed for libraries prepared with currently available methods, thus improving sequencing accuracy, operations, and throughput.