qPCR NEWS - June 2010 - The ongoing evolution of qPCR
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Dear researcher,
dear Gene Quantification page reader,

Our newsletter informs about the latest news in quantitative real-time
PCR (qPCR and qRT-PCR), which are compiled and summarised on the Gene
Quantification homepage. The focus of this newsletter issue is:

NEW  -   The ongoing evolution of qPCR
eConference with 50 talks presented at the "International qPCR 2010
Symposium in Vienna"
qPCR Symposium USA in November 2010
qPCR Application Workshops  -  and more ... ... ...


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Editorial The ongoing evolution of qPCR
http://evolution.gene-quantification.info

The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is usually described as a simple,
sensitive and rapid technique that uses oligonucleotide primers, dNTPs
and a heat stable Taq polymerase to amplify DNA. It was invented by
Kary B. Mullis and co-workers [1,2] in the early eighties, who were
awarded the 1993 Nobel Prize for chemistry for this discovery. With
the discovery of real-time PCR in the nineties the method took an
important hurdle towards becoming “fully quantitative” [3]. The
addition of an initial reverse-transcription (RT) step produced the
complementary RT-PCR, a powerful means of amplifying any type of RNA
[4,5]. Today quantitative PCR (qPCR) is widely used in research and
diagnostics, with numerous scientists contributing to the pre-eminence
of PCR in a huge range of DNA-, RNA- (coding and non-coding) or
protein- (immuno- or proximity ligation assay qPCR) based
applications. Soon the PCR was regarded as the “gold standard” in the
quantitative analysis of nucleic acid, because of its high
sensitivity, good reproducibility, broad dynamic quantification range,
easy use and reasonable good value for money [6-8].
qPCR has substantial advantages in quantifying low target copy numbers
from limited amounts of tissue or identifying minor changes in mRNA or
microRNA expression levels in samples with low RNA concentrations or
from single cells analysis [9-11]. The extensive potential to quantify
nucleic acids in any kind of biological matrix has kept qPCR at the
forefront of extensive research efforts aimed at developing new or
improved applications. But are qPCR and its associated quantification
workflow really as simple as we assume?
It is essential to have a comprehensive understanding of the
underlying basic principles, error sources and general problems
inherent with qPCR and RT-qPCR. This rapidly reveals the urgent need
to promote efforts towards more reproducible, sensitive, truly
quantitative and, ultimately, more biologically valid experimental
approaches. Therefore, the challenge is to develop assays that meet
current analytical requirements and anticipate new problems, for
example in novel biological matrices or for higher throughput
applications. Unfortunately, we are far from having developed optimal
workflows, the highest sensitivity, the best RNA integrity metrics or
the ultimate real-time cycler, all of which are indispensable for
optimal PCR amplification and authentic results. The qPCR research
community still aims to improve and evolve, which brings to the topic
of this PCR special issue - The ongoing evolution of qPCR.

In this issue we want to focus on some selected application fields
which have been identified as indispensable for research and
diagnostics:

Standardisation – Why do we need more standardisation and therefore
the MIQE (Minimum Information for Publication of Quantitative Real-
Time PCR Experiments) guidelines? Following these guidelines will
encourage better experimental practice, allowing more reliable and
unequivocal interpretation of quantitative PCR results. As we continue
to improve our workflow to achieve the best and, it is hoped, the most
valid results, the key message is that quality assurance and quality
control are essential throughout the entire RT-qPCR workflow, from
experimental design to statistical data analysis and reporting. The
first papers in this issue pinpoint these key components, will help
you identify the sources of errors and provide guidance towards which
experimental design might be best suited to your study. Since
meaningful conclusions can only derive from consistent and accurate
quantification results, increased reliability of research will help
ensure the integrity of the scientific literature.

MicroRNA – A second focus is on the valid quantification of microRNA.
I cannot over-emphasise the importance of microRNA in the regulation
and cellular turnover of the transcriptome. MicroRNAs are small non-
coding RNAs (~20-22 bases) and play an important role in gene
regulatory networks by binding to and repressing the activity of
specific target gene messages. Within the previous decade numerous
papers have been published and a range of microRNA applications have
been generated. Herein we want to focus on the quality control of
microRNAs in numerous tissues and to give an overview of new
quantitative assays using qPCR.

High Resolution Melting (HRM) Analysis - HRM is a relatively new
application for genotyping and variant scanning after a successful PCR
reaction. It can also be used to scan for rare sequence variants in
large genes with multiple exons, which are described herein. HRM assay
design, optimization, performance considerations, and new analysis
software based on cluster analysis are presented. The new HRM cluster
algorithm provides a sensitive and specific auto-calling of genotypes
from melting data allowing a more sensitive resolution of genetic
differences.

Copy Number Variations (CNV) - Copy number changes are known to be
involved in numerous human genetic disorders. Presented papers
describe qPCR-based copy number screening methods that may serve as
the “gold standard” for targeted screening of the relevant disease
genes. All relevant information for a successfully implementation of
qPCR in copy number analysis in a high throughput digital PCR is
included. Furthermore, recommendations for appropriate copy number
calculation and objective result-interpretation is also addressed.

Single-Cell qPCR and Circulating Tumor Cells - Single-cell gene
expression profiling is rarely undertaken, in part due to a lack of
understanding of single-cell biology and the underlying high cell-to-
cell variability. However, as the relevant paper shows, qPCR-based
single-cell gene expression profiling can be a powerful tool for
achieving a better understanding of molecular mechanism at the level
of a single cell. In addition, the analysis in circulating tumor cells
(CTCs) is described. CTCs can be released from the primary tumour into
the bloodstream and may colonize distant organs giving rise to
metastasis. The qPCR based analysis of individual cells opens up new
avenues for molecular biologists and for early cancer diagnostics.
Presented papers describe comprehensively which considerations one has
to take to avoid false conclusions during data analysis and
interpretation of single-cell expression profiling data. Moreover, the
focus is on the relevance of the clinical diagnostics generated so far
and based on the CTCs analysis in malignancy.

Circulating Nucleic Acids (CNA) - Recent studies have indicated that
microRNAs circulate in a stable, cell-free form in the bloodstream.
The expression pattern of specific microRNAs in plasma can be used as
a diagnostics tool and may serve as cancer biomarkers. Quantitative
measurement of circulating microRNAs as biomarkers is associated with
some special challenges, which are discussed, including those related
to sample preparation, microRNA extraction and stabilisation,
experimental design and data analysis. Furthermore recent reports on
the importance of CNA in the intercellular exchange of genetic
information between eukaryotic cells are reviewed.

Post qPCR data analysis - In research and in clinical diagnostics
enormous amounts of expression data based on quantification cycles
(Cq) are created. Accurate and straightforward mathematical and
statistical analysis of qPCR data and the related data management of
these growing data sets have become major hurdles to effective
implementation. 96-well and 384-well applications are standard formats
in research, but in the near future high throughput applications with
more than thousand PCR spots will generate huge amounts of data.
Various qPCR data sets need to be grouped, standardized, normalized,
and documented by intelligent software applications. In the presented
papers the main challenges and new solutions in mathematical and
statistical Cq data analysis are presented. The so-called qPCR bio-
informatics and bio-statistics field is highly variable, because a
range of data processing procedures have been adopted; these are based
on differing algorithms for performing background corrections,
threshold settings, Cq determination or RNA expression normalisation.
Herein we present statistical approaches based on multivariate
analysis of the fluorescence amplification response data generated.
The amplification trajectory is fitted with suitable models to analyse
PCR efficiency and to establish a qPCR quality control procedure
depends on a reference set.

In Conclusion – The last two decades have been characterised by
important methodological advances that have made qPCR more sensitive,
less variable and therefore more valid and reliable. Most advances
were implemented in the PCR method itself, but pre-PCR steps like
sampling, nucleic acid stabilisation and reverse transcription are
still highly variable and introduce lots of error in the
quantification procedure. Appling intelligent post-PCR data analysis
can partly circumvent these problems and “normalize out the introduced
error”, but there is still a general clamour for the most stable
references, the most appropriate normalisation strategies or robust
algorithms to calculate the PCR efficiency for later correction.
Clearly, we are still half way in terms on the entire quantification
work flow!

The developed MIQE guidelines will help to improve faster in future
experiments, but people really have to apply these instructions to get
more valid and “true” quantification results. For the future the
presented papers should help the qPCR community to improve and to
perform better. But we must be aware - the evolution of qPCR is still
continuing and will keep us researcher busy for the next decade(s)!

http://evolution.gene-quantification.info/



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Full papers and reviews:

The ongoing evolution of qPCR
    Pages 215-216
    Michael W. Pfaffl

Why the need for qPCR publication guidelines? - The case for MIQE
    Pages 217-226
    Stephen A. Bustin

How to do successful gene expression analysis using real-time PCR
    Pages 227-230
    Stefaan Derveaux, Jo Vandesompele, Jan Hellemans

Statistical aspects of quantitative real-time PCR experiment design
    Pages 231-236
    Robert R. Kitchen, Mikael Kubista, Ales Tichopad

mRNA and microRNA quality control for RT-qPCR analysis
    Pages 237-243
    C. Becker, A. Hammerle-Fickinger, I. Riedmaier, M.W. Pfaffl

Expression profiling of microRNA using real-time quantitative PCR, how
to use it and what is available
    Pages 244-249
    Vladimir Benes, Mirco Castoldi

High resolution melting analysis for gene scanning
    Pages 250-261
    Maria Erali, Carl T. Wittwer

Accurate and objective copy number profiling using real-time
quantitative PCR
    Pages 262-270
    Barbara D’haene, Jo Vandesompele, Jan Hellemans

Taking qPCR to a higher level: Analysis of CNV reveals the power of
high throughput qPCR to enhance quantitative resolution
    Pages 271-276
    Suzanne Weaver, Simant Dube, Alain Mir, Jian Qin, Gang Sun, Ramesh
Ramakrishnan, Robert C. Jones, Kenneth J. Livak

High-throughput droplet PCR
    Pages 277-281
    Amelia L. Markey, Stephan Mohr, Philip J.R. Day

Single-cell gene expression profiling using reverse transcription
quantitative real-time PCR
    Pages 282-288
    Anders Ståhlberg, Martin Bengtsson

Circulating tumour cells in clinical practice: Methods of detection
and possible characterization
    Pages 289-297
    Marianna Alunni-Fabbroni, Maria Teresa Sandri

Analysis of circulating microRNA biomarkers in plasma and serum using
quantitative reverse transcription-PCR (qRT-PCR)
    Pages 298-301
    Evan M. Kroh, Rachael K. Parkin, Patrick S. Mitchell, Muneesh
Tewari

Circulating nucleic acids in cancer and pregnancy
    Pages 302-307
    Pamela Pinzani, Francesca Salvianti, Mario Pazzagli, Claudio
Orlando

Quality control for quantitative PCR based on amplification
compatibility test
    Pages 308-312
    Ales Tichopad, Tzachi Bar, Ladislav Pecen, Robert R Kitchen,
Mikael Kubista, Michael W. Pfaffl

Bias in the Cq value observed with hydrolysis probe based quantitative
PCR can be corrected with the estimated PCR efficiency value
    Pages 313-322
    Jari Michael Tuomi, Frans Voorbraak, Douglas L. Jones, Jan M.
Ruijter

Gene expression profiling – Clusters of possibilities
    Pages 323-335
    Anders Bergkvist, Vendula Rusnakova, Radek Sindelka, Jose Manuel
Andrade Garda, Björn Sjögreen, Daniel Lindh, Amin Forootan, Mikael
Kubista


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Sponsored Application Notes:

A practical approach to RT-qPCR—Publishing data that conform to the
MIQE guidelines
    Pages S1-S5
    Sean Taylor, Michael Wakem, Greg Dijkman, Marwan Alsarraj, Marie
Nguyen

Improved microRNA quantification in total RNA from clinical samples
    Pages S6-S9
    Ditte Andreasen, Jacob U. Fog, William Biggs, Jesper Salomon, Ina
K. Dahslveen, Adam Baker, Peter Mouritzen

ScreenClust: Advanced statistical software for supervised and
unsupervised high resolution melting (HRM) analysis
    Pages S10-S14
    Valin Reja, Alister Kwok, Glenn Stone, Linsong Yang, Andreas
Missel, Christoph Menzel, Brant Bassam

Rapid quantification of DNA libraries for next-generation sequencing
    Pages S15-S18
    Bernd Buehler, Holly H. Hogrefe, Graham Scott, Harini Ravi, Carlos
Pabón-Peña, Scott O’Brien, Rachel Formosa, Scott Happe

Evaluation of the LightCycler® 1536 Instrument for high-throughput
quantitative real-time PCR
    Pages S19-S22
    Jenny Schlesinger, Martje Tönjes, Markus Schueler, Qin Zhang,
Ilona Dunkel, Silke R. Sperling

Expanding applications of protein analysis using proximity ligation
and qPCR
    Pages S23-S26
    Elana Swartzman, Mark Shannon, Pauline Lieu, Shiaw-Min Chen, Chad
Mooney, Eric Wei, Julie Kuykendall, Rouying Tan, Tina Settineri,
Levente Egry, David Ruff



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qPCR 2010 in Vienna
   International qPCR Symposium & Exhibition
   7-9th April 2010
   http://www.qpcr2010-vienna.net/
   Topic:   "The ongoing evolution of qPCR"


BioEPS is now presenting the qPCR 2010 eConference online via video
stream!

330 attendee from 37 contries and 39 international companies in the
industrial exhibition participate at the event 7 - 9th April 2010 in
Vienna.

During the symposium the presented 50 talks were recorded in high
sound quality and movie resolution and they will be made available as
eConfernce qPCR 2010 on our streaming server eConference.qPCR2010-
Vienna.net  or   eConference.bioeps.com   With our new eConference
streaming server a world-wide know-how transfer becomes possible in a
fast and simple way.

The qPCR 2010 package contains 50 talks from the qPCR Symposium 2010
in Vienna with well recognized speakers from all over the world:

The talks by the plenary lecturer, selected invited academic and
industrial speakers will be published in METHODS special qPCR Vol 50
issue 4  (April 2010)  with the title “The ongoing evolution of
qPCR”   => TOC  and  HTML  and  PDFs


The qPCR 2010 eConference package contains 50 talks in high resolution
from the qPCR Symposium 2010 in Vienna with the following sessions:

- MIQE and QM strategies in qPCR  (incl. SA Bustin)
- High throughput quantitative PCR – digital PCR   (incl. M Kubista, P
Day)
- HRM – High Resolution Melting - Epigenetics  (incl. C Wittwer, C
Orlando)
- CNA - Circulating nucleic acids    (incl. P Pinzani, J Huggett)
- Single-cell qPCR  (incl. K Livak)
- RNAi - microRNA - siRNA Applications – miRNA normalisation (incl. J
Vandesompele, M Castoldi, MW Pfaffl)
- qPCR data analysis - BioStatistics & BioInformatics (incl. J
Hellemans, M Kubista, A Tichopad)

- detailed info about all talks and the speakers => 
http://sessions.qpcr2010-vienna.net

- To get connected - visit our web shop  =>  http://eConference.bioeps.com





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BioEPS GmbH - qPCR Application Workshops

Life Science is still a growing sector and new methods and
technologies are continously developed. Therefore permanent training
and education becomes so important.

With our specific course program we are offering a range of high-
quality course modules, in cooperation with different companies to
give a general and independent overview of existing qPCR technologies
and systems. Our course issues are based on skilled know-how from own
research studies and publications.

Our aim is to point out a critical way of thinking to increase the
quality and outcome of experimental data.


All courses are held regularly in Freising-Weihenstephan, Germany, in
German and English language.
Further customized workshops and specialized trainings will be held as
well across Europe and world-wide.
Workshops are powered by BioEPS GmbH, located at the campus of the
Technical University of Munich, in Freising-Weihenstephan, very close
to the Munich Airport (MUC). For more information and registration,
please see our web page => http://workshops.gene-quantification.info/

Course Occasions 2010:

3-day qPCR Basic Module
2-day BioStatistics & Expression Profiling Module
3-day single-cell qPCR
2-day microRNA qPCR
1-day HRM
2-das qPCR-R data analysis   NEW !
1-day Project Management   NEW !
2-day Quality Management  NEW !


Course dates 2010:

12 - 14  July 2010  (E)   3-day qPCR Basic Module (Mon. - Wed.)
4 - 6  October 2010  (E)   3-day qPCR Basic Module (Mon. - Wed.)
7  October 2010  (E)    1-day HRM Module (Thu.)
11 - 12 October  2010  (E)   2-day qPC-R - data analysis using R
packages (Mon.-Tue.)
18 - 20 October  2010  (E)   3-day single-cell & qPCR (Mon. - Wed.)
21 - 22 October  2010  (E)   2-day Experiment Design  &  qPCR data
processing  (Thu. - Fri.)
8 - 9  November 2010  (E)   2-day microRNA & qPCR (Mon.-Tue.)
29 November - 1 December 2010  (E)   3-day Experiment Design  &  qPCR
data processing  (Mon. - Wed.)
2 - 3 December 2010  (E)   2-day BioStatistics Module (Thu. - Fri.)


Download course brochure 2010 => 
http://www.gene-quantification.de/bioeps-course-programm-2010.pdf

Register here => http://site.bioeps.com/index.php?option=com_seminar&Itemid=6

Access to our workshops => http://www.gene-quantification.de/bioeps-access.html


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Forward Please send the qPCR NEWS to further scientists and friends
who are interested in qPCR !


Best regards,

Michael W. Pfaffl
responsible Editor of the Gene Quantification Pages
http://www.gene-quantification.info



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