BioTechniques (Sep 1998)

Isolation of Differentially Expressed Genes by Combining Representational Difference Analysis (RDA) and cDNA Library Arrays

  • M. Geng,
  • C. Wallrapp,
  • F. Müller-Pillasch,
  • M. Frohme,
  • J.D. Hoheisel,
  • T.M. Gress

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2144/98253st05
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 3
pp. 434 – 438

Abstract

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The difference products (DP) of representational difference analyses (RDA) were used as hybridization probes on cDNA arrays. The effectivity of RDA products obtained with increasing driver/tester ratios (DP 1 = 100:1, DP 2 = 800:1 and DP 3 = 400000:1) to isolate differentially expressed genes was compared with the effectivity of conventional differential hybridizations. Pacreatic cancer and control tissues were used as a test system to isolate differentially expressed genes. The use of RDA products as hybridization probes showed two major advantages: (i) a reliable identification of true differential signals; and (ii) only one autoradiograph had to be analyzed, which eliminated the need for a laborious subtraction of signal intensities obtained with different cDNA probes. Increasing driver/tester ratios in iterative rounds of RDA delivered more specific results, though the total yield of differential clones was gradually reduced. In this situation, the intermediate RDA product DP 2 provided the best compromise.