Drug Discovery 2017
Poster
45

Comparison of branched DNA and qPCR assays for the quality control of stem cell differentiation

Objective

Quantitative PCR has been regarded as the gold-standard for assessing messenger RNA levels in cultured cells and tissues. However, the technique has several disadvantages. The reverse-transcriptase and amplification steps can bias transcript quantitation, and the limit on the number of transcripts which can be multiplexed results in a combination of relatively low throughput with large RNA input, impacting on cost and use of precious samples. In order to overcome these limitations, we assessed the suitability of a branched DNA assay alongside qPCR as a method to quality control the differentiation of stem cells into neurons using a published small molecule differentiation protocol. A panel of 43 genes linked to markers of differentiation was tested in parallel with both techniques. Results from both methods were comparable - the bDNA assay producing consistent data but using significantly less sample (1-2 wells from a 96-well plate for all 43 markers vs. 48 wells in qPCR). The higher throughput and lower sample requirements for the bDNA protocol allows its use as a continual QC tool rather than as a retrospective analysis of differentiation resulting in more efficient, accurate monitoring of neuronal differentiations and a subsequent reduction of wasted experimental time on substandard neuronal populations.

Hosted By

ELRIG

The European Laboratory Research & Innovation Group Our Vision : To provide outstanding, leading edge knowledge to the life sciences community on an open access basis

Get the App

Get this event information on your mobile by
going to the Apple or Google Store and search for 'myEventflo'
iPhone App
Android App
www.myeventflo.com/2038