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MRC-Holland b.v. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 Page 1 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes Table of Contents 1. Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 2 2. MLPA PROBES Terminology ................................................................................................................ 3 3. 3.1. 3.2. MLPA PROBES Method ......................................................................................................................... 4 MLPA method .......................................................................................................................................... 4 Methylation-Specific MLPA method ......................................................................................................... 5 4.1. 4.2. 4.3. MLPA PROBES DNA sequence ............................................................................................................ 5 Getting the DNA sequence of choice ...................................................................................................... 5 Formatting the DNA Sequence ................................................................................................................ 7 Elongating a known human sequence in one or both directions ............................................................. 8 5.1. 5.2. MLPA PROBES Basics probe design .................................................................................................. 9 General Probe Design Rules ................................................................................................................... 9 Probe design steps ................................................................................................................................ 10 6.1. 6.2. 6.3. 6.4. 6.5. 6.6. MLPA PROBES Important design concerns ..................................................................................... 10 Minimum number of MLPA probes per reaction .................................................................................... 10 The effect of the Tm value ..................................................................................................................... 10 The effect of the first nucleotide............................................................................................................. 11 The effect of mismatches (including SNPs and mutations) on probe signal ......................................... 11 Selecting reference probes (only if it is NOT possible to use the P200 or P300 reference probemixes)12 Optional signal-reducing competitor oligo ............................................................................................. 13 4. 5. 6. 7. MLPA PROBES Designing Methylation-Specific MLPA probes ..................................................... 13 8. MLPA PROBES Probe design example ............................................................................................. 13 9. ORDERING synthetic probes.............................................................................................................. 14 10. 10.1. 10.2. 10.3. 10.4. 10.5. ORDERING MLPA reagents ................................................................................................................ 14 Situation 1: adding probes to P200/P300 reference probemix .............................................................. 14 Situation 2: adding probes to an existing SALSA MLPA probemix ....................................................... 16 Situation 3: making an all-synthetic probemix ....................................................................................... 16 EK MLPA reagent kits (for standard MLPA and MS-MLPA) ................................................................. 17 Quality Control Fragments ..................................................................................................................... 17 11.1. 11.2. 11.3. 11.4. PREPARING the synthetic probemix ................................................................................................. 17 General guidelines ................................................................................................................................. 17 Making the synthetic basic probemix (step a-c) .................................................................................... 17 Making the final probemix (step d)......................................................................................................... 18 Making a competitor oligo mix ............................................................................................................... 19 11. 12. Troubleshooting................................................................................................................................... 19 13. References ............................................................................................................................................ 20 14. Useful websites, tools and software .................................................................................................. 20 MRC-Holland b.v. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 Page 2 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes 1. Introduction Designing synthetic probes is a common practice performed by many of our customers who want to have an MLPA probemix targeted to genes not covered by any probemix available from MRC-Holland. To facilitate this, we have a protocol available that describes the design of synthetic probes in detail. When designing probes for human genes, we recommend adding your synthetic probes with our P200 or P300 Human DNA Reference probemixes. These probemixes contain high-quality reference probes and MLPA control fragments, while leaving sufficient space for the addition of synthetic probes. More information can be found in 10.1 Situation 1: adding probes to P200/P300 reference probemix. Around 11 probes can be included in a synthetic probemix, see 5 MLPA PROBES Basics probe design. Each MLPA reaction should be done with at least 5 MLPA probes; using fewer probes makes the reaction unreliable. Synthetic probes differ from MRC-Holland probes in that our probes consist of one synthetic oligonucleotide and one clone-derived one. This allows us to make longer probes and to include up to 50 different probes in one MLPA reaction. Advantages of own synthetic probes vs. MRC-Holland probes: • Own design. • Quickly available. Disadvantages of own synthetic probes vs. MRC-Holland probes: • Restrictions on maximum probe length and therefore fewer probes per MLPA reaction. • Quality of probes depends on own design and oligo supplier. • Without previous design experience, designing MLPA probes can be difficult. Although this protocol tries to describe MLPA probe design rules as comprehensively and clearly as possible, it is impossible to convey all our in-house probe design experience. • At MRC-Holland, probes are elaborately tested for various characteristics, including peak height, reproducibility across samples, sensitivity to differences in salt concentration and polymerase activity. This requires special expertise. There are three kinds of MLPA probes: • DNA probes : detection/quantification of genomic DNA sequences. • Methylation probes : detection/quantification of both copy number and methylation of genomic DNA. • RNA probes : detection/quantification of mRNA-derived cDNA. The design of synthetic RNA probes is described in a different protocol, available on request: [email protected]. Feedback about this protocol? Please email [email protected]. This protocol offers detailed guidelines for synthetic probe design. Unfortunately, MRC-Holland cannot offer any additional support on synthetic probe design. If you do not have any experience with MLPA, you are strongly advised to first get familiar with the MLPA method by reading the MLPA technology section on our website. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 3 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes 2. MLPA PROBES Terminology Figure 1 - Terminology of probe components. One MLPA probe consists of two oligonucleotides: the Left Probe Oligonucleotide (LPO) and the Right Probe Oligonucleotide (RPO). Both LPO and RPO may contain an optional stuffer sequence in between the hybridising sequence and the primer binding site, although this is not recommended for synthetic probes. LPO: 5’ end: binding sequence of Forward PCR primer (GGGTTCCCTAAGGGTTGGA); 3’ end: Left Hybridising Sequence (LHS). RPO: 5’end: Right Hybridising Sequence (RHS); 3’ end: binding sequence of Reverse PCR Primer (TCTAGATTGGATCTTGCTGGCAC). The primer binding sequences are used for the amplification of the probe during the PCR reaction; labelled primers are supplied by MRC-Holland. Term/abbreviation BLAST BLAT Map Viewer Coding Sequence CDS Forward Probe HUGO name LHS & RHS - Left & Right Hybridising Sequence Left Probe Oligo LPO Ligation site melting temperature - Tm Explanation Basic Local Alignment Search Tool from NCBI, to compare DNA sequences with sequences deposited in the Genbank database. Often used at MRC-Holland are the Genome BLAST (sequence vs. “standard” human genome) and the NR (Non-Redundant) BLAST: sequence vs. collection of selected DNA/mRNA sequences. BLAST-like alignment tool. Developed by the University of California Santa Cruz. Excellent tool to find sequence similarities, flanking sequences, SNPs, CpG islands, copy number viariation in healthy individuals and many more features of a sequence. NCBI website that offers a graphical overview of the human and other genomes: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mapview/map_search.cgi?taxid=9606 Sequence between start and stop codon. In Map Viewer, numbers mentioned under CDS refer to numbering of the Genbank entry of NM sequence. Most of our probes are located in coding regions of genes. We use the term Forward Probe when the hybridising part of the probe is identical to the mRNA sequence. These Forward Probes thus bind to the complement of the coding strand. Reverse Probes detect the opposite strand. Each gene has been assigned an official HUGO name by the committee of the Human Genome Organization. For instance, the HUGO name of the p53 gene is TP53. More information on http://www.genenames.org Hybridising parts of LPO and RPO. Bind to adjacent target DNA sequences. Probe oligonucleotide that is situated on the left when probe is shown from 5’ to 3’. Consists of forward PCR primer sequence (5’ end) and hybridising sequence (3’ end). 3’ nucleotide of LPO and 5’ nucleotide of RPO, where ligation occurs. Temperature at which 50% of a sequence’s copies are in stable double helix and 50% are single stranded. Tm indicates the strength of the probe-target binding and is influenced by the length and sequence (in particular the %GC) of the hybridising sequence, salt concentration and the solvent used. RaW software is the tool used at MRC-Holland to calculate the Tm, see http://www.mlpa.com - Support – Designing Synthetic probes. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 4 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes NM_ sequence nt MLPA probe Primer Right Probe Oligo RPO SNP Please note that many different algorithms exist to calculate the Tm, each resulting in a different value. Reference sequences of mRNAs. Each common transcript variant has a separate NM_ accession number. A good overview of the various transcript variants of a gene can be obtained on the Entrez Gene website: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?db=gene. For exon numbering, which cannot be found in NM_sequences anymore, look for corresponding NG_sequence here: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/refseq/rsg/browse/. N.b. NG_sequences also include intronic sequences. Nucleotide. The combination of LPO and RPO. DNA oligonucleotide which, when annealed to a complementary DNA sequence, can be used as starting point for extension by a polymerase enzyme during PCR. Note that in MLPA, a primer is not the same as a probe! An MLPA probe recognises a designated DNA target, while primers are used only for amplification of probes during PCR. A universal primer pair is used for all MLPA probes, including synthetic ones; labelled PCR primers of the correct sequence are supplied by MRC-Holland as part of an MLPA reagents kit. Probe oligonucleotide situated on the right when probes is shown from 5’ to 3’. Consists of hybridising sequence (5’ end) and the reverse complement of the reverse PCR primer (3’ end). The 5’ end of the RPO has to be phosphorylated or ligation of LPO and RPO will fail. Single Nucleotide Polymorphism. 3. MLPA PROBES Method 3.1. MLPA method Figure 2 - MLPA method 1. Denaturation and hybridisation Hybridisation sequence (left) Hybridisation sequence (right) 2. Ligation 3. PCR with universal primers X and Y 4. Fragment analysis 1. DNA sample is heated so that it denatures, probemix is added. Each probe consists of two parts: the LPO and RPO, which hybridise to the adjacent targets on the sample DNA. 2. LPOs and RPOs that are hybridised to adjacent targets are ligated to form one complete probe. 3. During the PCR reaction, only complete probes are amplified exponentially. 4. The amplification products are separated by capillary electrophoresis. 5. Using intra- and inter normalisation of the signals by MLPA analysis software (Coffalyser.Net) it is possible to compare a patient with various reference samples, which yields information on copy number changes. Note that a cloned RPO (as shown here) always contains a stuffer sequence (green). In synthetic probes, the use of a stuffer is not recommended. Click on “MLPA Procedure” section on the MLPA website for more details about the MLPA method: www.mlpa.com Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 5 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes 3.2. Methylation-Specific MLPA method Methylation-specific MLPA (MS-MLPA) probes are similar to the normal DNA probes, but contain a Hha1 restriction site in their hybridising sequence. The Hha1 enzyme cuts DNA at GCGC unless the first C of the CGCG restriction site of the target DNA is methylated. By adding the HhaI enzyme together with the ligase-65 enzyme, probes that are hybridised to unmethylated restriction sites are cut and cannot be amplified. Each MS-MLPA reaction is divided in two parts after the probe hybridisation reaction: one for the copy numbers (ligation only) and one for the methylation status (ligation + digestion). Methylated Target Unmethylated Target M M 1.1. Denaturation Denaturationand andHybridization hybridisation M 2. Ligation / Digestion 2.with Ligation / Digestion endonuclease methylation-sensitive with methylation-sensitive endonuclease M PCRwith withuniversal universalprimers primersXXand andYY 3.3. PCR Exponential amplification, undigested exponential amplification of ligated, undigestedprobes probesonly only X Y FragmentAnalysis Analysis&&Sample SampleComparison Comparison 4.4. Fragment Figure 3 - Left: overview of the MS-MLPA method. Right: results of samples. After hybridisation, the reaction is split into an undigested reaction, for detection of copy numbers, and a digested reaction, for detection of methylation status. In the digested reaction, the HhaI restriction enzyme will cut probes that are hybridised to unmethylated restriction sites, so that they cannot be amplified. A) Undigested reference sample, B) Digested reference sample, C) Undigested patient sample, D) Digested patient sample. Aberrant methylation is visible by comparison of pictures B and D. Taken from Nygren et al. (2005) Nucl. Acid Res. 33:e128. 4. MLPA PROBES DNA sequence 4.1. Getting the DNA sequence of choice To design a probe, the sequence of the target DNA of interest is needed. One of the many ways to find, see 4.1 Getting the DNA sequence of choice, and format, see 4.2 Formatting the DNA Sequence, the sequence of a human gene is described below. If the target sequence is known, 4.3 Elongating a known human sequence in one or both directions describes how to obtain the flanking genomic sequences. For other organisms, other databases and tools may be better suited. 1. Determine the name of the gene of interest. Many genes have several aliases; to avoid confusion it is recommended to check http://www.genenames.org/ to see what the HUGO-approved gene name is. 2. Find the Accession number of the mRNA reference sequences. A useful site for this is NCBI Entrez gene: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?db=gene. Alternatively, on the Mapview website: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mapview/, do a search for the name of the gene. From the results, look for the RefSeq transcripts. - A list of Reference Sequences associated with the gene is shown, these are often splicing variants. Find the NM_sequences and select the standard that is used in the RefSeqGene project (it might be necessary to MRC-Holland b.v. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 Page 6 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes check all NM_sequences), or choose the longest transcript. Keep in mind that the standard in the RefSeqGene project or the longest transcript does not necessarily include all exons. If this is the case, look for missing exons in alternative transcripts. Note down the NM_ accession nr of choice for later use. Exon numbering: NG_sequences can be consulted to find the exact exon numbers: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/refseq/rsg/browse/, Keep in mind however that intronic sequences are also included in the NG-sequences. - If you follow the Mapview website, an overview is given of the genomic position of the gene relative to other genes. Click again, the following page shows the reference mRNA sequence. Figure 4 - Steps required to obtain the DNA sequence. Map Viewer (a, b), Gene Report (c), NCBI Reference Sequence (d). 3. Determine exon-intron boundaries. To determine exon-intron boundaries, the mRNA sequence is compared with the complete genome. One way of doing this is to do a Genome BLAST on the NCBI website (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genome/seq/BlastGen/BlastGen.cgi?taxid=9606). Paste the sequence of interest or the Genbank (NM_) accession nr and do a search using the default settings. On the next screen, change the Alignment View to Query Anchored with dots for identities, and limit your results to “Homo Sapiens” in the Organism field. 4. Retrieve Genomic Sequence. Go to the Santa Cruz Website: http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgGateway, and do a search on the gene name. Select the RefSeq with the corresponding Accession number. Alternatively, submit the sequence of interest in BLAT (http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgBlat). On the next page, an overview is given of the part of the genome where the gene of interest is located. Determine the direction of the gene, (>>>> Forward; <<<< Reverse). Click View, DNA at the top of the screen. Select the “All lower case” tick box (see Figure 5). Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 7 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes Figure 5 - Steps required to obtain the DNA sequence from the Santa Cruz website. a. If the gene is reverse as indicated on the previous screen, tick the Reverse Complement box. Click the button extended Case/Color options, copy the settings from Figure 6 and click submit. (If some of the tracks are unavailable, go two pages back and turn them on visible. Click refresh to apply the settings.) Figure 6 - '' Extended Case/Color'' option in Santa Cruz. b. 4.2. 1. Copy the sequence obtained to MS Word. Note that large sequences may cause Word to crash. You can prevent this by turning the spell check off beforehand and/or by using several files. Formatting the DNA Sequence Formatting the Word document. Firstly, all line breaks/enters are removed using the Find and replace tool in Word. a. Click Ctrl-H in Word to open it. Next, type “^p” in the Find what: field. Click Replace All . b. The next step is making SNPs more recognisable; to make SNPs stand out, we will highlight them. Click the button More >>; see Figure 7. Set the cursor on the blank Find what field, click Format, Font choice, select font style Italic and click OK. This searches for everything in the document that is italic, which are the SNPs. Now set the cursor on the blank Replace with: field. Click Format, Font choice and select Highlight. The colour of the highlight can be changed using this button . Click Replace All. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 8 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes Figure 7 - ''Replace'' function in Word. c. For Methylation probes, it is useful to also mark the restriction sites. When using Hha1, this is GCGC. Set the cursor on the Find what: field and click No Formatting. Insert the sequence of the restriction site. Change the colour of the highlight to a different colour, and click Replace All. The result should be similar to that shown in Figure 8. AGGGGTGGAGAGAAAAGAGGGGAGGGATGGGGGGAGGGGAAACAGGAGCGAGGTGTCTCCCTAGCTCGCTGCCTCTGGCAAGTGGAGT TTTTAAAAAGCTCCAGCAGATCATGTCATGACGACTTCGCTGCTCCTGCATCCACGCTGGCCGGAGAGCCTTATGTACGTCTATGAGG ACAGCGCGGCGGAGAGCGGCATCGGCGGCGGCGGCGGAGGAGGAGGCGGCGGCACGGGCGGAGCGGGGGGTGGCTGCAGCGGAGCGAG CCCCGGCAAAGCCCCGAGCATGGATGGTCTGGGCAGCAGCTGCCCGGCCAGCCACTGCCGCGACCTGCTTCCGCACCCCGTGCTGGGC CGCCCGCCGGCTCCCCTGGGCGCCCCTCAGGGCGCCGTCTATACGGACATCCCGGCCCCGGAGGCGGCGCGCCAGTGTGCCCCGCCGC CCGCACCCCCCACCTCGTCCAGCGCCACCCTGGGCTACGGCTACCCCTTCGGGGGCAGCTACTACGGCTGCCGCCTGTCGCACAACGT GAACCTGCAGCAGAAGCCTTGCGCCTACCACCCGGGCGATAAATACCCGGAGCCGTCGGGCGCCCTGCCCGGTGACGACCTGTCCTCT AGGGCCAAGGAGTTCGCCTTCTACCCCAGCTTCGCCAGCTCCTACCAGGCGATGCCCGGCTACCTGGACGTGTCGGTGGTGCCCGGGA TCAGCGGGCACCCGGAGCCGCGTCACGACGCCCTCATCCCCGTCGAAGGCTACCAGCACTGGGCTCTCTCCAATGGCTGGGACAGTCA GGTGTACTGCTCCAAGGAGCAGTCGCAGTCCGCCCACCTCTGGAAGTCTCCCTTCCCAGgtaaggaagggacccgagcgccgccgccg ccggggacccctccccgccctgcctgccccggggctccgcgccccaaccacccccgccgtctggccccggcgcgcccgctcggctggg ctgcctatggagccggccgggcgagctgcactgaggaatgcgccggggaagaaatctgctccgacacgttctctgtagctgcccggcc gagaatgaagcaatcacaggcgcccgaaagccgggccgccggctctgctctgtccggtagctcgcctccgcctccccttgcaggctcc agcctcccgccgggctcttggcccctaaacctgcttccggcaagggatgggggcggggtgggcctatagtgccttggaatccaggaca aaacccccaacccaccgaataactggggagggcggagaataagaacccccactttctttgacagaattcgcaggatcgttcaggcact agacagtattttttaaataggggactaatttgctggggtctacagaaatgtgagatttatttttttcctttcctgacttattttaaaa atctggccacgaatttcctgattgttgagggaacagaagatccaaaatctctggagagggagtggagaggaggctagaatccctcccc agcattgtaaagttttccttgcctctttggtatattgagctcaaacctatagacatttccactgccaactcccccatatgtggtcgag aaagagagttagttattggtgccccagacacagaaagaagggcgtggggatgagaaatgggagaggaagacctgttcaagacctgttc Figure 8 - Formatted DNA sequence. Highlighted restriction sites and SNPs. Underlined and Uppercase: exon. Lowercase: intron. Blue: CpG island. Highlighted in blue: Restriction site (for Methylation probes). Highlighted in brown and italic: Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (avoid). 4.3. Elongating a known human sequence in one or both directions When only part of a human sequence is known (for instance the sequence detected by one of our probes), the Santa Cruz website is a perfect tool to find the flanking genomic sequences. Paste the sequence available in the BLAT Search genome site: http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgBlat Click submit. Select the sequence with the best homology, usually the upper one. Remember whether the strand is mentioned as “+“ or “-“. When mRNA sequences are inserted that contain exon boundaries, the SPAN will be larger than the difference between Start and End; click browser. In the next screen, click DNA at the top of the screen. Fill in the required number of extra nucleotides upstream and downstream. Use multiples of 50 nt as each line of the sequence obtained has 50 nt. When the strand was “-“, click Reverse complement. When additional information is required such as the position of SNPs, click All lower case and extended case/color option and proceed as depicted in Figure 6. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 9 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes 5. MLPA PROBES Basics probe design Please note that the word “probe” in this protocol refers to the combination of a given LPO AND RPO. 5.1. General Probe Design Rules Please also follow the additional guidelines in 6 MLPA PROBES Important design concerns. When designing Methylation probes, please also follow the additional guidelines in 7 MLPA PROBES Designing MethylationSpecific MLPA probes. • LPO Hybridising Sequence (LHS) and RPO Hybridising Sequence (RHS) should be directly adjacent. • Preferably locate hybridising sequences in the coding parts of a gene, where more information on SNPs is available. • There should be no overlap between the hybridising sequences of different probes. • Each probe should have a unique total probe length (LPO+RPO). • Total probe length mentioned in this protocol consists of: LHS + RHS + 42 nt for both PCR primer binding sequences. Add the length of a stuffer if used (use only if necessary, see 6.2 The effect of the Tm value). • Divide the total probe length evenly over LPO and RPO to avoid an unnecessary long length of one oligo (note: the longer the oligo, the lower the quality). • Minimum length of LHS or RHS : 21 nucleotides • Minimum total length difference required between probes : 4 nt • Minimum and maximum total synthetic probe length The best length for synthetic probes is between : 100 and 140 nt. The exact minimum and maximum probe length depend on what you will add your synthetic probes to. Check the product description of the probemix you are going to add your probes to and make sure there is at least 4 nt between your probe(s) and any existing probe or control fragment in the probemix. The absolute maximum length for synthetic probes is 168 nt. Use stuffer sequences only if needed, see 6.2 The effect of the Tm value. In practice, such long probes will have a lower signal due to lower quality of long synthetic oligonucleotides, and will often have shoulder peaks which complicate analysis. For this reason we strongly recommend to avoid the use of probes with a total length of > 140 nt. When using the P200 probemix, the minimum probe length is 88 nt to avoid overlap with the Q fragments. This means that a total of 88-42 nt (primer binding sequences) = 46 nt is the minimum length of BOTH hybridising sequences together. If the 46 nt is evenly divided between LHS and RHS, the hybridising sequence of the LHS and RHS will be 23 nt each. To obtain a sufficiently high Tm, only probes in GC rich sequences can be made with such short lengths. • Tm of each hybridising sequence (LHS, RHS separately) : ≥ 71°C (Absolute minimum is 68°C, see • • Table 1) • ∆G =secondary structure (LHS / RHS) preferably : ≥ 0 (Preferred, drop this criterium if not feasible) • LPO primer binding sequence1 : GGGTTCCCTAAGGGTTGGA • RPO primer binding sequence1 : TCTAGATTGGATCTTGCTGGCAC • GC content : ~ 50% (If possible) • LHS : preferably a maximum of 2 G/C nt in the 5 nt at its 3’ end, directly adjacent to the ligation site • LHS/RHS : preferably a maximum of 3 G/C directly adjacent to the primer binding sequence Table 1 – LHS/RHS length and Tm length 23-25 (23 and 24 nt: use only in exceptional cases) 26-30 31-35 36-40 40-max. 55 1 Tm range ≥ 72.5 °C, preferably > 74.0 °C ≥ 71.0 °C, preferably > 72.5 °C ≥ 71.0 °C ≥ 70.0 °C ≥ 68.0 °C The primer sequence contained in the LPO is identical to the sequence of the Forward PCR Primer and is used in the second PCR cycle. The primer binding sequence incorporated in the RPO is complementary to the reverse primer that is included in each MLPA kit. During the first amplification round in MLPA, the reverse primer binds to this complementary sequence in the RPO and a complementary copy of the original probe is made. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 10 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes 5.2. Probe design steps • • • • • • Find the region of interest, preferably in an exon. Try to find a region with the following features: o GC% = ~50%. Specifically around the 5’ and 3’ of the LHS. o No or limited homology with other human sequences. In case two closely related sequences have to be distinguished, make certain that the last nucleotide of the LPO has a mismatch with the related sequence (6.4 The effect of mismatches (including SNPs and mutations) on probe signal). o No SNPs. See also 6.4 The effect of mismatches (including SNPs and mutations) on probe signal o No overlap with another probe, as it will compete for the same target sequence. Adjust the length of the LHS and the RHS so that: 2 o Tm is preferably >70 °C (absolute minimum 68 °C). Use RaW program . o The LHS 5’ does not start with an Adenine (if no stuffer is used). o Length of the LHS and the RHS is at least 23 nucleotides each. Use the UNAfold website (see Mfold website) to test the ∆G of the LPO and RPO: o Copy the primer binding sequence, (stuffer) and LHS in the correct order on the website. o Set the [Na+] = 0.35 M. o Set the Folding temperature = 60° C. o Click the Fold DNA button and make sure ∆G ≥ 0 (if possible). Always take the first ∆G value (Structure 1). o You can click the ‘jpg’-link if you want to see the folding structure of the oligo. This can give you a better idea of the chances of the oligo binding to itself, especially in the case of a negative ∆G. o Repeat steps for the RPO (keep in mind that LPO and RPO have a different primer sequence). Testing the specificity of the probe: o Run the LHS and RHS together in the Human Genome BLAST website, see 14. Useful websites, tools and software. Tick somewhat similar sequences in Program Selection. o Look for any undesirably homologies and try to avoid these. If there is a homologous sequence which overlaps with both the LHS and RHS, make sure that the overlap with either LHS or the RHS has a Tm of <50°C (use RaW to calculate the overlap present - LHS and RHS separately). If the overlap with both LHS and RHS has a Tm which is higher than 50°C and has >12 overlapping nucleotides, both oligonucleotides may bind sufficiently strongly to be ligated and generate a signal, which should be avoided. Do the same in NR BLAST: if the link is unclear about the origin of the sequence, copy the name given under LOCUS and look it up in Map Viewer and/or do a BLAT on the Santa Cruz site. If a probe sequence is polymorphic or can be found in a different gene as well: see 6.4 The effect of mismatches (including SNPs and mutations) on probe signal. Design a new probe if there are avoidable polymorphisms. 6. MLPA PROBES Important design concerns 6.1. Minimum number of MLPA probes per reaction Any MLPA reaction should be done using a total of at least 5 unique probes in a probemix, because the quantity of probes affects how the MLPA PCR reaction comes to a halt. In probe sets with a sufficiently high number of probes, the PCR reaction will stop due to primer depletion, as all probes use the same PCR primers. After ~30 cycles, most of the PCR primers will have been depleted and even extra PCR cycles will not influence relative peak heights/areas. In contrast, when there is only a small number of probes, the PCR reaction will slow down due to rapid reannealing of complementary strands. PCR primers will not be completely consumed, meaning the PCR reaction does not come to a full stop. As a result, relative peak heights can change in even the last PCR cycles, thereby making the results more variable. Therefore, make sure that any probemix used in a single MLPA reaction contains at least 5 probes in total. 6.2. The effect of the Tm value There is no upper limit for the Tm and it is thus possible to use long hybridising sequences. The advantage of a long hybridising sequence and a high Tm is a lower sensitivity of the probe signal to polymorphisms (SNPs) within the hybridising sequences. However, the use of a non-hybridising stuffer sequence (derived from e.g. T7 or λ2 The RaW program that can be downloaded from our website, use the following settings: Go-Oli-Go method; 0.1 M salt; 1 µM oligo concentration. Different programs will give different Tm values! Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 11 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes phage sequences) may occasionally be advantageous to obtain sufficient probe length, for instance when the target sequence is very GC-rich. Only use a stuffer when necessary, as it is easier to just extend the hybridising sequence. Once bound, the chance of a probe leaving its target during the remaining part of the 16 hrs hybridisation reaction should be very low. In case the binding of one of the probe oligonucleotides to the DNA template is not sufficiently stable, an equilibrium will be reached between probe binding and probe “denaturation” which is extremely sensitive to small changes in incubation temperature and probe and salt concentrations. In that case, small differences in evaporation between different samples can also have a strong effect on the MLPA results. This is why we recommend having a Tm of at least 71°C. 6.3. The effect of the first nucleotide The first nucleotide following the LPO primer binding sequence (GGGTTCCCTAAGGGTTGGAN) affects the height of the probe signal. Usually, this will be the first nucleotide of the LPO hybridising sequence. (When a stuffer sequence is used, it is the first nucleotide of the stuffer which matters.) Strongest weakest signal: CC >C > G > T > A. We recommend using the following division in the choice of first nucleotides: • T for short probes (<120 nt) • G for the intermediate (120-140 nt) probes • C for long (>140 nt) probes. The use of Adenosine as a first nucleotide should be avoided. Using CC as the first two nucleotides gives an even higher signal (CC>CG>CT>CA). Note that the first nucleotide of choice does not necessarily have to hybridise to the target DNA. It is not essential to follow these recommendations, but it may help reduce sloping: the effect that longer probes give lower signals. The above guidelines can also be used to redesign certain LPOs after the first MLPA experiments in order to further optimise the peak pattern by increasing or decreasing the peak height of selected probes. Please ensure a minimum size gap of 4 nt between probes remains after the addition of any nonhybridising nucleotides. 6.4. The effect of mismatches (including SNPs and mutations) on probe signal When designing a probe that includes an unavoidable SNP, or conversely, a probe that should specifically detect a single nucleotide difference such as a point mutation, keep in mind the following: The ligase-65 enzyme is most sensitive to mismatches on 3’ end (=LPO border) of the ligation site. Probes that have a mismatch on the 5’ site of the ligation site (i.e. the 3’ end of the RPO) are usually still ligated to some extent. When mismatches are further away from the ligation site, the effect becomes less predictable and may vary from a substantially reduced probe signal to no effect at all. This depends mostly on the Tm of the remaining continuous sequence. In the next two chapters, more information can be found first on how to design when aiming to detect a mismatch and lastly on how to design to minimise the effect of a mismatch. 5’ 3’ 3’ 5’ Figure 9 - The 5’ side of the ligation site (the LPO border) is most sensitive to mismatches. a. Designing probes that should detect a mismatch If you aim to design a probe that can distinguish two closely-related sequences (e.g. a gene from a pseudogene) or one that specifically detects a point mutation or SNP, make sure the mismatch with the related sequence or the point mutation/SNP is located on the last nucleotide on the 3’ end of the LPO (i.e. the 5’ side of the ligation site); see Figure 9. MRC-Holland b.v. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 Page 12 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes Keep in mind that probes having a G/T or T/G mismatch with the sample DNA at the 3’ end of the LPO still generate a signal of approximately 25%, see Table 2. This is due to the fact that Guanine and Thymine are able to form some hydrogen bonds, allowing ligation activity. A very small probe signal (<5%) might be obtained when the probe has a C/T mismatch with the sample DNA at the 3’ end of the LPO. Table 2 – Mismatch with the sample DNA at the 3’ end of the LPO 3’ ligation site sequence to be detected > related sequence G>A T>C C>T Mismatch between the nucleotide at the 3’ end of the LPO and the sample DNA. (expected probe signal as compared to no mismatch) G > T (~ 25%) T > G (~ 25%) C > A (< 5%) Examples: Probe: LPO 5’…CATGTGTCCAAG-TGGAAGCCC… 3’ RPO Gives no signal on sequence CATGTGTCCAAC-TGGAAGCCC Gives no signal on sequence CATGTGTCCAAT-TGGAAGCCC But gives a ~ 25% signal on sequence CATGTGTCCAAA-TGGAAGCCC Solution is to design a probe that detects the complementary strand. Probe: LPO 5’…CATGTGTCCAAT-TGGAAGCCC…3’ RPO Gives no signal on sequence CATGTGTCCAAA-TGGAAGCCC Gives no signal on sequence CATGTGTCCAAG-TGGAAGCCC But gives a signal (~ 25%) on sequence CATGTGTCCAAC-TGGAAGCCC Solution is to design a probe that detects the complementary strand. Probe: LPO 5’…CATGTGTCCAAC-TGGAAGCCC…3’ RPO Gives no signal on sequence CATGTGTCCAAA-TGGAAGCCC Gives no signal on sequence CATGTGTCCAAG-TGGAAGCCC Might give a low signal on sequence CATGTGTCCAAT-TGGAAGCCC Probe: LPO 5’…CATGTGTCCAAA-TGGAAGCCC…3’ RPO Gives no signal on sequence CATGTGTCCAAT-TGGAAGCCC Gives no signal on sequence CATGTGTCCAAG-TGGAAGCCC Gives no signal on sequence CATGTGTCCAAC-TGGAAGCCC b. Designing probes while trying to minimise the effect of a mismatch Sequence variations within two nucleotides of the ligation site can result in a reduced probe signal due to the less effective ligation of the two probe oligonucleotides. Secondly, mismatches in the middle of the hybridising sequence may have an (strong) effect on the final probe signal by negatively affecting the stability of the probe binding, due to the reduction of the remaining Tm. This is why it is advised to avoid any SNPs in the target sequence if possible. If you cannot avoid the presence of certain SNPs in the probe sequence, make sure you minimise their effect by situating SNP at least 8 nt from the ligation site. Make sure that both the LHS and RHS sequence still have a o remaining continuous sequence (without SNPs) with a Tm of at least 70 C to ensure that the probe oligonucleotide can still bind stably to its target, even when the SNP is present in the DNA target sequence. 6.5. Selecting reference probes (only if it is NOT possible to use the P200 or P300 reference probemixes) MLPA is a relative technique, meaning that any probe peaks obtained only make sense when seen in relation to other probes and to other samples. To detect any relative changes in the peaks generated by your target-specific probes, reference MLPA probes are needed. Reference probes should detect genes that are unrelated to the condition of interest and that are preferably located at a different chromosome. When you are working with human genomic DNA, adding your synthetic probes to the SALSA MLPA probemix P200 or P300 will provide you with sufficient reference probes. For all other organisms or RNA detection, you will have to design your own reference probes. The design of reference probes follows the same rules as targetspecific probes. Please select genomic regions in which copy number changes are rare and which are usually unaffected in the condition of interest. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 13 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes 6.6. Optional signal-reducing competitor oligo By the inclusion of a competitor oligo or COMP in the probemix, a probe signal can be reduced. This COMP is identical to the LPO and to a small part (4 nucleotides: TGGA) of the Forward primer binding sequence. The COMP will compete with the LPO for the limiting number of binding sites on the cDNA (in RT-MLPA) or genomic DNA (in MLPA). It can be ligated to the RPO, but the resulting COMP-RPO ligation product cannot be amplified exponentially as the probe formed in this way does not contain both primer binding sequences. The use of a 1:1 ratio of LPO and its corresponding competitor normally reduces the probe signal two-fold. COMP oligos for DNA MLPA mixes can be added together with the LPO and RPO oligos in the 200ul basic synthetic probemix, see step c in 11.2 Making the synthetic basic probemix (step a-c). 7. MLPA PROBES Designing Methylation-Specific MLPA probes Please read the above sections 5 MLPA PROBES Basics probe design and 6 MLPA PROBES Important design concerns carefully, as these rules also apply to Methylation-specific probes. Cytosine residues followed by Guanines (5’ CpG 3’) are targets for methylation enzymes in humans. Any sequence carrying a methylation-sensitive restriction endonuclease site can be used for MLPA methylation detection probes. CpG islands in the promoter region of genes are usually of interest for methylation testing. We use the Hha1 restriction enzyme, which digests probe-DNA hybrids containing the Hha1 restriction site with the first C on the target DNA unmethylated. HhaI can be replaced by other enzymes, although not all methylationsensitive restriction enzymes will be compatible with the buffer and temperature used in the MLPA ligation reaction. In our initial testing, HhaI performed better than HpaII and several other enzymes. Restriction endonucleases are less efficient in digesting sites that are located near the end of the doublestranded region of the probe-target hybrid. Therefore, the HhaI site should not be located at the 5’ end of the LHS or at the 3’ end of the RHS; make sure that at least 5 nt on either site of the GCGC sequence hybridise to the target sequence. • A GCGC restriction site should be located inside the hybridising sequence, with a minimum of 5 nt distance to the 5’ of the LHS or the 3’ end of the RHS. • Because of the high GC% of CpG islands, it can be hard to meet all requirements specified under 5.1 General Probe Design Rules. The following requirements can be relaxed a bit: ∆G can be slightly negative. GC% should preferably be ~50% around the 5’ and 3’ of the LHS, but may be higher in other parts. • Most CpG sequences outside the CpG islands are methylated in human DNA. CpG sequences within CpG islands are often protected from methylation. Sequences located near the boundaries of a CpG island may in some cases be methylated in a subset of the cells, resulting in low signals for MS-MLPA probes directed to these sequences. • For probes in CpG islands, a higher (2-3 fold) concentration of the probe oligonucleotides is sometimes required, as the high secondary structure of the target sequence of a probe will reduce the oligonucleotides’ hybridisation speed. Other criteria for MS probes are similar to those for DNA probes (see 5 MLPA PROBES Basics probe design). 8. MLPA PROBES Probe design example Synthetic (MS-)MLPA DNA probe • Chr. 21q22.11 • Synthetic DNA specific MLPA probe for methylation quantification in the human EVA1C gene. • Genbank Sequence: NM_058187.4 • Total length of amplification product: 55 + 55 = 110 nt. • LPO: o Tm= 77.2 ºC. o forward primer sequence (bold) + LHS: GGGTTCCCTAAGGGTTGGACGGTTCAGAAAGATGCTGTGGCCCACTTTAAAACA A Length: 19 (PCR primer; bold) + 1 (stuffer) + 25 (hybridising; underlined) = 55 nt. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 14 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes • RPO: o o Tm= 79.5 ºC RHS (5’ phosphorylated!!) + reverse primer sequence (bold): AGCCCAATTATTAGCGCTCGGCGGCTGTTTGTTCTAGATTGGATCTTGCTGGCAC Length: 31 (hybridising; underlined) + 1 (stuffer) + 23 (PCR primer; bold) = 55 nt. HhaI site (GCGC) is highlighted in grey. The combined LHS+RHS is: GGTTCAGAAAGATGCTGTGGCCCACTTTAAAACAAAGCCCAATTATTAGCGCTCGGCGGCTGTTTG The probe will bind to the reverse-complement of this sequence! 9. ORDERING synthetic probes We strongly recommend ordering probes from IDT: www.idtdna.com. We know some laboratories experienced problems using synthetic MLPA probes bought elsewhere, due to bad quality or incomplete phosphorylation. A low quality of the oligonucleotides results in lower signals and shoulder peaks. In particular an extra peak that is one nt shorter than the real probe peak can appear. Quality requirements for MLPA probe oligonucleotides are higher than for conventional PCR primers, so select your supplier carefully. Before ordering, take note of the following: All RPOs should be 5’-phosporylated! LPO: starts with GGGTTCCCTAAGGGTTGGA (forward primer binding sequence). RPO: ends with TCTAGATTGGATCTTGCTGGCAC (reverse primer binding sequence). Note that oligos should never be fluorescently labelled; only the PCR primers (ordered from MRC-Holland) need to be labelled (if desired). Oligos shorter than 60 nt: 25 nMol. Oligos longer than 60 nt: ‘’Ultramers” ultramer at 4 nMol scale. An example of a synthetic probe as it should be ordered can be found in paragraph 8 MLPA PROBES Probe design example. In our experience, synthetic oligonucleotides, including phosphorylated oligos, are stable for o many years when dissolved in TE and stored at -20 C. 10. ORDERING MLPA reagents To perform an MLPA reaction, you need MLPA reagents. Reagents are sold by MRC-Holland in so-called SALSA MLPA EK kits, which contain all necessary enzymes, buffers and labelled PCR primers. MLPA Reagents kits are described in detail in 10.4 EK MLPA reagent kits Furthermore, it is recommended to add your probes to an existing SALSA MLPA (reference) probemix, if possible. There are three basic options of how to use your own synthetic probes in an MLPA reaction: 1. Combine synthetic human DNA probes with the SALSA MLPA P200 or P300 Human reference probemix in combination with an EK MLPA reagents kit. This is the most commonly used option. See 10.1 Situation 1: adding probes to P200/P300 reference probemix. 2. Add a few probes (1-2) to any existing MLPA probemix and use the MLPA reagents of an EK MLPA reagents kit. See 10.2 Situation 2: adding probes to an existing SALSA MLPA probemix. 3. For other applications, such as RNA detection or other organisms, make a completely synthetic probemix and use this in combination with EK (RT-)MLPA reagents kit. See 10.3 Situation 3: making an allsynthetic probemix. It is possible to order quality control fragments separately if desired. More information about these options can be found below. All prices and ordering information can be found on www.mlpa.com under Ordering > Price list. 10.1. Situation 1: adding probes to P200/P300 reference probemix The SALSA MLPA P200 and P300 MLPA Human Reference probemixes both contain carefully selected reference probes for human DNA and are specifically designed to be used in combination with self-made synthetic human DNA probes. In addition, they contain various control fragments that are also present in other SALSA MLPA probemixes, which help detect problems that could affect the MLPA reaction (insufficient DNA quantity, Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 15 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes denaturation problems). Together, the reference probes and control fragments facilitate data analysis, maximise the number of synthetic probes you can include and give you extra assurance that the MLPA reaction went well. More details about the P200 and P300 can be found in Table 3 and Table 4. The main difference is that the P200 leaves the range from 80-170 nt open for the inclusion of synthetic probes, while P300 has reference probes distributed over the whole size range of the probemix. The latter allows for a better correction of signal sloping in the MLPA amplification products3. The use of P300 is recommended when a smaller number of synthetic probes is used. The use of P200 is recommended when a large number of synthetic probes is used, preferably targeting sequences on different chromosomes. More information on www.mlpa.com; search for P200 or P300. Advantages & Disadvantages of using P200 or P300 reference probemix: Probes are not suitable for non-human DNA. + No need to design reference probes. The SALSA MLPA reference probes in the P200 and P300 have been carefully selected from our probe database of well over 15,000 probes on the basis of their stable and reliable performance. + SALSA MLPA reference probes are located over the whole size range (P300) or predominantly in the longer probe range (P200), thus maximising the number of (shorter) self-made target probes to be used in the limited size range suitable for synthetic probes, without having to use up this precious design space for reference probes. + The presence of quantity control fragments (Q-fragments) warns for insufficient DNA or ligation problems. 4 + Denaturation fragments (D-fragments) warn for poor denaturation, for instance due to contaminants . + P200 and P300 allow for easy MLPA troubleshooting: using this probemix enables you to determine whether possible problems are due to the synthetic probes (i.e. design, quality) or something in the MLPA reaction or sample quality. + Identity of reference probes available on request. Table 3 – SALSA MLPA P200 Human DNA Reference-1 probemix Length (nt) SALSA MLPA probe Chromosomal position MV36* other reference (in Mb) 64-70Q-fragments: DNA quantity; only visible with less than 100 ng sample 76-82 DNA 173 Reference probe 03578-L02939 7q31 117.09 178 Reference probe 03139-L02607 14q22 54.40 184 D-fragment 08865-L08987 14q32 103.25 190 Reference probe 09561-L10015 20p13 3.84 196 Reference probe 05371-L04762 13q12 19.70 202 Reference probe 02213-L01217 20p12 10.57 208 Chromosome X probe 05005-L04391 Xq26 132.50 214 Reference probe 08172-L08052 10p13 13.18 220 Reference probe 09841-L10251 12q24 129.42 226 Reference probe 09100-L09159 4q25 110.91 233 Reference probe 05737-L05176 18q11 13.87 240 Chromosome Y probe 01071-L00464 Yq11 14.10 244 Reference probe 08051-L07832 5p15 13.82 250 Reference probe 08590-L08591 17p11 17.07 * Distance to P-telomere. 3 Signal sloping is the effect that longer probes generate a lower peak height in the electropherogram than shorter probes. The degree of sloping differs between sequencer types. Because signal sloping may differ between samples, a bias can occur when reference probes are located only in the longer probe range as is the case in the P200. This is why the P300 reference probemix might be preferred. 4 To learn more about Q and D control fragments, please consult the MLPA protocol, which can be found on our website www.mlpa.com > MLPA procedure > MLPA Protocols > One-Tube MLPA Protocol for DNA Detection and Quantification. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 16 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes Table 4 – SALSA MLPA P300 Human DNA Reference-2 probemix Length (nt) SALSA MLPA probe other Chromosomal position MV36* reference (in Mb) 64-7076-82 88 Q-fragments: DNA quantity; only visible with less than 100 ng sample DNA D-fragment S0598-L28340 10.8 Mb 19p13 Ligation-dependent control 92 113.3 Mb 02q13 fragment S0005-L00509 108 Reference probe S0973-L27812 4p13 42.3 Mb 130 # Digestion control probe S0750-L27811 2q12 102.6 Mb 148 Reference probe 17669-L27446 5q33 156.6 Mb 172 Reference probe 19185-L27754 3q23 140.4 Mb 178 # Digestion control probe 20190-L27120 21q22 34.1 Mb 184 D-fragment 10904-L27810 9q34 134.2 Mb 191 Reference probe 18767-L28188 10q22 71.9 Mb 196 Reference probe 11157-L11841 5q31 137.6 Mb 208 Chromosome X probe 19928-L27808 Xq23 111.9 Mb 214 Reference probe 19623-L27807 10p11 34.6 Mb 220 Reference probe 14967-L27452 6q22 129.7 Mb 226 Reference probe 20173-L27439 2p22 32.2 Mb 232 Reference probe 19768-L27755 12q12 41.1 Mb 239 Chromosome Y probe 19927-L27806 Yq11 14.0 Mb 246 Reference probe 19985-L27453 4p16 5.7 Mb 252 D-fragment 20039-L27756 16q24 86.2 Mb 258 Reference probe 18593-L27454 2q33 199.9 Mb 265 Reference probe 13392-L14849 6q12 65.4 Mb 274 Reference probe 17450-L21206 16p13 9.8 Mb * Distance to P-telomere. # Only when used for methylation quantification (MS-MLPA), this denaturation warning probe can be used as digestion control probe (warning for insufficient HhaI digestion). Upon digestion of the probesample hybrids with HhaI, this probe should not give a signal. Probes with length 88-148 are included in P300 reference probemix only; P200 leaves this range open for inclusion of additional synthetic probes. Data obtained with the P200 and P300 and included synthetic probes can be analysed using the Coffalyser.Net MLPA data analysis software. Coffalyser can be downloaded freely from our website: www.mlpa.com (click on Coffalyser.Net). In the Coffalyser Sheet Library you can find the P200 and P300 sheets, to which you can add your synthetic probes. 10.2. Situation 2: adding probes to an existing SALSA MLPA probemix Advantages & Disadvantages of using an existing SALSA MLPA probemix: + No need to order another probemix. + No need to design reference probes. + Easy to do. Little space to add probes. Recommended when only 1 or 2 probes have to be added. 10.3. Situation 3: making an all-synthetic probemix In case you are designing probes for organisms other than humans, the only option is to make an all synthetic probemix consisting solely of your own synthetic probes. You can use this probemix in combination with an MLPA EK reagents kit. More information on how to pipette this synthetic probemix can be found in 11 PREPARING the synthetic probemix. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 17 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes Advantages & Disadvantages of making an all-synthetic probemix: Necessary to design own reference probes, which can be challenging and takes up design space. It is advised to use minimally 8 (for tumour characterisation minimally 10) reference probes. Difficult to assess whether possible problems are due to synthetic probe design or oligo quality or other factors. No quality control fragments (can be ordered separately). + Suitable for all organisms • Note that at least 5 probes should be included in the MLPA reaction. • Recommended only for experienced MLPA probe designers. 10.4. EK MLPA reagent kits (for standard MLPA and MS-MLPA) EK kits contain all necessary MLPA reagents except for a probemix; so no reference probes or quality control fragments are present. The MLPA reagents are5: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. MLPA buffer Ligase-65 enzyme Ligase-65 buffer A Ligase-65 buffer B SALSA Polymerase SALSA PCR primers, incl. dNTPs – various fluorescent dyes available, incl FAM, Cy5.0 EK kits are available in the following pack sizes: EK1 (100 reactions) and EK5 (500 reactions). EK kits can be used both for a standard MLPA reaction as well as Methylation-Specific MLPA (HhaI enzyme not included). 10.5. Quality Control Fragments It is possible to order control fragment to be used with your own synthetic MLPA probes. Two control fragment solutions are available: • CF1: contains Quantity Control (Q-)fragments which screen for insufficient DNA quantity + the 92 nt control fragment to compare these signals to. • CF4: contains Q-fragments + the 88 & 96 nt Denaturation Control (D-)fragments and the 92 nt control fragment to compare these signals to. Both CF1 and CF4 are supplied as 25 x concentrated solutions (175 µl/vial; sufficient for 3000 MLPA reactions). Note that only the Quantity Control fragments will work on ANY organism as they do not need to hybridise to the target DNA. The 92 nt fragment and 88 and 96 nt Denaturation Control fragments work on human DNA only! 11. PREPARING the synthetic probemix 11.1. • • • 11.2. General guidelines Do not use much more than the recommended amounts of probes as this may cause non-specific amplification products and lower probe signals. The amount given below is sufficient to cover >95% of the target sequences with probes within 10 hrs of hybridisation. Having such near-complete coverage means that relative probe signals will depend on the relative amount of the probe target sequence in the sample and NOT on the exact amount of probes used. A probe signal cannot be increased by addition of larger amounts of that particular probe. Oligos should be dissolved and diluted in TE: 10mM Tris-HCl, pH=8.0; 1 mM EDTA Oligo solutions should be stored at -20 ºC. They should never be heated. Making the synthetic basic probemix (step a-c) Making a synthetic probemix from incoming oligos requires the following four steps (see also Figure 10 and examples below) : a. Make a 100 µM (normal oligos) or 10 µM (ultramers) oligo stock solution for each oligo by adding TE. 5 Note that in October 2011, MRC-Holland has switched to a one-tube MLPA protocol. Before this date, the so called two-tube MLPA protocol was in use. EK kits sold prior to October 2011 also contained SALSA PCR Buffer and Enzyme Dilution Buffer. These two reagents are no longer needed in the one-tube protocol. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 18 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes b. c. d. Make a 1 µM final solution for each oligo by diluting the oligo stock solution further. Combine 0.8 µl of the 1 µM final solution of each oligo (LPO and RPO of all probes), adding TE to obtain a total volume of 200 µl. This is the synthetic basic probemix. Add this synthetic basic probemix to (1) the P200/P300 reference probemix, or (2) to an existing MLPA probemix, or (3) dilute it further to use it independently, as specified below. Figure 10 - How to process incoming oligos to a final probemix that can be used for the MLPA reaction. Example 1 (step a-c): you receive 40 nMol of oligo: a. Dissolving 40 nMol of oligo in 400 µl TE will result in a 100 µM stock solution. b. From this 100 µM stock solution, make a 100 fold dilution (1 µM) of each oligo in TE, for example making 1 ml by diluting 10 µl stock solution in 990 µl TE. c. Mix 0.8 µl of each 1 µM oligo solution (LPO + RPO) in a total volume of 200 µl. Example 2 (step a-c): if you receive 4 nMol 6 (e.g. IDT ultramers), it is recommended to prepare stock solutions of 10 µM instead of 100 µM. a. Dissolving 4 nMol oligo in 400 µl TE will result in a 10 µM stock solution. b. From this 10 µM stock solutions, make a 10 fold dilution (1 µM) of each oligo in TE, for example making 0.1 ml by diluting 10 µl stock solution in 90 µl TE. c. Mix 0.8 µl of each 1 µM oligo solution (LPO + RPO) in a total volume of 200 µl. 11.3. Making the final probemix (step d) Step d, making the final probemix that is to be used in the MLPA reaction, depends on what the synthetic oligos are added to: Situation 1 - Adding oligos to an MRC-Holland MLPA probemix: Use 1.5 µl MRC-Holland probemix + 0.5 µl of your own synthetic basic probemix (end product of step c) in the MLPA reaction. Total volume of the hybridisation reaction is increased from 8 to 8.5 µl, but this is no problem. Situation 2 - Adding oligos to the P200 or P300 MLPA reference probemix: For each planned MLPA reaction, combine 0.5 µl of your synthetic basic probemix (end product of step c) with 1 µl of P200 or P300 reference probemix. From this solution, use 1.5 µl for each MLPA reaction. Situation 3 - Using an all-synthetic probemix Increase the volume of the synthetic basic probemix (end product of step c) to 600 µl (optionally including 24 µl of the 25x concentrated control fragment mixes CF1 or CF4) by adding TE. From this solution, use 1.5 µl for each MLPA reaction. 6 When receiving 15 nMol or less, it is advised to make a 10 µM stock solution (step a) instead of a 100 µM stock solution, as dissolving oligos in less than 150 ul TE is not practical. When an oligo is longer than 60 nt, these are typically ordered as ultramers (see 9 ORDERING synthetic probes) in which case the quantity received is usually <15nM. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 19 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes Example 3 - making a final synthetic probe mix (step a-d) for one probe (situation 2): • LPO concentration: received 40.5 nmol, dissolve in 405 µl TE to get a 100 µM stock solution. • RPO concentration: received 27.2 nmol, dissolve in 272 µl TE to get a 100 µM stock solution. • From both the LPO and RPO stock solution, make 1 µM final solution. For 1 ml, take 10 µl of the stock solutions and add to 990 µl TE. Do this for both oligos. • To obtain a synthetic basic probemix with a total volume of 200 µl, mix o 0.8 µl of the LPO 1 µM final solution o 0.8 µl of the RPO 1 µM final solution o 198.4 µl TE • Step d: use 0.5 µl of this 200 µl synthetic basic probemix together with 1 µl P200 or P300 MLPA reference mix and use this combined probemix for the MLPA reaction. 11.4. a. b. c. d. Making a competitor oligo mix Dissolve each COMP in TE at a concentration of 100 µM. Mix 4 µl of each 100 µM COMP. Dilute with TE to a final volume of 1000µl. Prepare hybridisation master mix containing, for each reaction: 1.5 µl MLPA buffer (yellow cap) + 1.5 µl probemix (black cap). Add 1.5µl MLPA Buffer + 1.5 µl probemix + 0.5 µl of Competitor mix. o Proceed with the MLPA protocol: 1 minute heating at 95oC, 16 hrs incubation at 60 C etc. 12. Troubleshooting All probes give low signals: To test whether your oligo supplier indeed supplies good quality oligos, you can order this probe: SerpinB2 gene: Chr. 18; length of amplification product: 81+42=123 nt. LPO: GGGTTCCCTAAGGGTTGGACCATGACTCCAGAGAACTTTACCAGCTGTGGGTTCATGCA RPO: 5’-P-GCAGATCCAGAAGGGTAGTTATCCTGATGCGATTTTGCAGGTCTAGATTGGATCTTGCTGGCAC An optional competitor that can be used to reduce the signal of this probe (see 6.6 Optional signal-reducing competitor oligo) has the sequence: TGGACCATGACTCCAGAGAACTTTACCAGCTGTGGGTTCATGCA Low signal of one or a few probes: In case one probe signal is very low, addition of up to three times more of that specific probe may sometimes solve the problem, especially for probes in CG-rich sequences. A new design of the LPO may also help: remember that having a Cytosine as the first nucleotide after the PCR forward primer sequence will generate the highest signal. See 6 MLPA PROBES Important design concerns. High signal of one or a few probes: There are two options to reduce peak height. First is to change the first nucleotide after the primer of the LPO to a T, see 6.3 The effect of the first nucleotide. Another option is to order a competing LPO, see 6.6 Optional signalreducing competitor oligo for more information. For other troubleshooting related to the MLPA reaction, see the troubleshooting section on our website. Q and D fragments for example are important aids in troubleshooting MLPA. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 MRC-Holland b.v. Page 20 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes 13. References The following publications describe the use of synthetic MLPA probes: • • • • • • • • Kiehntopf et al. (2012) A homemade MLPA assay detects known CTNS mutations and identifies a novel deletion in a previously unresolved cystinosis family. Gene 495:89-92. Serizawa et al. (2010) Custom-designed MLPA using multiple short synthetic probes: application to methylation analysis of five promoter CpG islands in tumor and urine specimens from patients with bladder cancer. J Mol Diagn 12:402-8 Wildförster, V. and Dekomien, G. (2008) Detecting copy number variations in autosomal recessive limb-girdle muscular dystrophies using a multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) assay. Mol Cell Probes. 23:55-9. Roelfsema et al. (2005) Genetic heterogeneity in Rubinstein-Taybi Syndrome: mutations in both the CBP and EP300 genes cause disease. Am J Hum Genet. 76:572-80. Vink GR et al. (2005) Mutation screening of EXT1 and EXT2 by direct sequence analysis and MLPA in patients with multiple osteochondromas: splice site mutations and exonic deletions account for more than half of the mutations. Eur J Hum Genet. 13:470-4. Langerak P et al. (2005) Rapid and quantitative detection of homologous and non-homologous recombination events using three oligonucleotide MLPA. Nucleic Acids Res. 33:e188. Stern RF et al. (2004) Multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification using a completely synthetic probe set. Biotechniques. 37:399-405. White et al. (2004) Two-color multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification: detecting genomic rearrangements in hereditary multiple exostoses. Hum Mutat. 24:86-92. 14. Useful websites, tools and software If an URL is no longer working, please notify us at [email protected]. Coffalyser.Net Mfold DNA Folding Program Ensemble Entrez Gene Human Genome BLAST Human Genome Organization Genbank Genomic Variants Database Map Viewer (Human) NR-BLAST OMIM PubMed RaW USCS BLAT Free software for analysis of MLPA results, available via www.mlpa.com Coffalyser.Net http://mfold.rna.albany.edu/?q=mfold Parameters should be set on [Na+] = 0.35 M, T = 60° C. http://www.ensembl.org/index.html Ensembl is a joint project between EMBL - EBI and the Sanger Institute. It is helpful for information on certain genes http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?db=gene, useful for finding NMsequences (for exon numbers, see NG-sequences: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/refseq/rsg/browse/). http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genome/seq/BlastGen/BlastGen.cgi?taxid=9606 http://www.genenames.org http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=Nucleotide Useful for looking up reference (NM_) sequences. http://dgv.tcag.ca/dgv/app/home Database of copy number variants in the human genome http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mapview/ NCBI: NR-blast/blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=OMIM http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed http://www.mlpa.com - Support – Designing Synthetic probes MRC-Holland Software for Tm determination http://genome.ucsc.edu/cgi-bin/hgBlat?command=start Please note that designing MLPA for commercial use is not allowed when this infringes on MLPA patents US 6955901, CA2400240, EP 1130 113 A1, US 2007009288 MRC-Holland b.v. Version 15 Last update 09-09-2015 Page 21 of 21 Designing synthetic MLPA probes Implemented Changes compared to previous synthetic probe design protocol versions Version 15 (Sep 2015) Information about mRNA MLPA removed (Protocol inc. RNA probes is available on request). Information about NG-sequences added. Minor textual changes and layout changes. § 2 Term/abbrevations adjusted § 5.2 ≥12 nucleotides overlap with both LHS and RHS of a homologous sequence changed into >12. § 10.1 Table 3 adjusted and Table 4 added. Version 14 (Dec 2014) Minor textual changes and layout changes. §12.5 Making a COMP mix for RNA mixes added. §5.1 Added reference to §6 MLPA PROBES Important design concerns Version 13 (Dec 2014) Changed the term ‘kit into ‘probemix’, where applicable. Removed information about PM200 probemix and EK20 reagent kit. Minor textual changes and layout changes. §1 Removed information about alternative probe design methods; reference to §11.1 added. §2 Link to RaW program updated; information about Coffalyser.Net software added; mistake corrected in information about Primer. §3.2 Information about high signals which should be taken into consideration added. §4 Information about transcript to choose changed; figure 4,5&6 updated. §5.2 Changed minimum length LHS and RHS to 23 instead of 21 nt; settings Genome BLAST specified. §6.4 Increased the minimum number of nt needed in between SNP; ligation site and 5’ and 3’ ends added in figure 9. §9 Probe design examples updated. §11.1 Minor changes in table 3. §11.2 Situation 2: Adding probes to P200/P300 reference probemix placed after §11.1 Situation 1: adding probes to an existing SALSA MLPA probemix. Advantage added to the last-mentioned situation. §11.3 Completed with information about number of reference probes to add. §11.6 CF2 changed into CF4. §12.4 Volume of RT mix added. §14 Reference list updated. §15 Link Genomic Variants Database updated and information about Coffalyser.Net added. Version 12 (Jan 2012) Order of chapters changed: probe design example is now §9. §6.3 The effect of the first nucleotide: lengths added for short, intermediate and long probes. §8.1: Recommended Tm value of RT-primers increased to 55-65 ºC (identical to versions before v11) §11 Ordering MLPA reagents has been rewritten: a clearer distinction has been made between probemixes and reagent kits; the contents of the EK MLPA Reagents kits have been adapted to the one-tube MLPA protocol. §12 Making the synthetic probe mix has been described in more detail and an illustration has been included §13: probe design example altered Version 11 (Sept 2011) Various changes in wording, pictures and document structure, including: §1: Mentioned the PM200 as a reference kit for mouse DNA; added information about minimal number of probes for MLPA reaction. §2: Changed HUGO website. §4.1: Added referral: 4.3 ‘Elongating a known human sequence in one or both directions’; Replaced figures 4a, b & c and figure 6. §5.2: Changed MFold DNA Folding Program website and max Tm in ‘Testing the specificity of the probe. §8.1: Changed the Tm of RT-primers §9: Changed information about scale of oligos to order; added information about oligo quality. §10: Added 10.4 ‘Minimal requirements’. §11: Added note that oligo solutions should not be heated. §13: Added example of making a synthetic probemix. §15: Changed HUGO, USCS BLAT and MFold DNA Folding Program websites; added information about AlleleID software.