Publication | Open Access
Efficient Production of On-Target Reads for Small RNA Sequencing of Single Cells Using Modified Adapters
17
Citations
19
References
2018
Year
Molecular BiologyEfficient ProductionTranscriptomics TechnologyHigh Throughput SequencingSingle Cell SequencingAdapter DimersRna SequencingSingle-cell GenomicsSmall Rna SequencingGene ExpressionSingle-cell AnalysisBioinformaticsFunctional GenomicsCell BiologyLong-read SequencingSingle-cell Mrna SequencingNatural SciencesOn-target ReadsSmall RnaSystems BiologyMedicineGenome Editing
Although single-cell mRNA sequencing has been a powerful tool to explore cellular heterogeneity, the sequencing of small RNA at the single-cell level (sc-sRNA-seq) remains a challenge, as these have no consensus sequence, are relatively low abundant, and are difficult to amplify in a bias-free fashion. We present two methods of single-cell-lysis that enable sc-sRNA-seq. The first method is a chemical-based technique with overnight freezing while the second method leverages on-chip electrical lysis of plasma membrane and physical extraction and separation of cytoplasmic RNA via isotachophoresis. We coupled these two methods with off-chip small RNA library preparation using CleanTag modified adapters to prevent the formation of adapter dimers. We then demonstrated sc-sRNA-seq with single K562 human leukemic cells. Our approaches offer a relatively short hands-on time of 6 h and efficient generation of on-target reads. The sc-sRNA-seq with our approaches showed detection of miRNA with various abundances ranging from 16 000 copies/cell to about 10 copies/cell. We anticipate this approach will create a new opportunity to explore cellular heterogeneity through small RNA expression.
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