Empirical evaluation of humpback whale telomere length estimates; quality control and factors causing variability in the singleplex and multiplex qPCR methods

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Telomeres, the protective cap of chromosomes, have emerged as powerful markers of biological age and life history in model and non-model species. The qPCR method for telomere length estimation is one of the most common methods for te...

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Main Authors: Olsen Morten, Bérubé Martine, Robbins Jooke, Palsbøll Per J
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012-09-01
Series:BMC Genetics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2156/13/77
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spelling doaj-47c0e3c9feaa4d72aae4e1cd818fa70f2020-11-25T03:41:36ZengBMCBMC Genetics1471-21562012-09-011317710.1186/1471-2156-13-77Empirical evaluation of humpback whale telomere length estimates; quality control and factors causing variability in the singleplex and multiplex qPCR methodsOlsen MortenBérubé MartineRobbins JookePalsbøll Per J<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Telomeres, the protective cap of chromosomes, have emerged as powerful markers of biological age and life history in model and non-model species. The qPCR method for telomere length estimation is one of the most common methods for telomere length estimation, but has received recent critique for being too error-prone and yielding unreliable results. This critique coincides with an increasing awareness of the potentials and limitations of the qPCR technique in general and the proposal of a general set of guidelines (MIQE) for standardization of experimental, analytical, and reporting steps of qPCR. In order to evaluate the utility of the qPCR method for telomere length estimation in non-model species, we carried out four different qPCR assays directed at humpback whale telomeres, and subsequently performed a rigorous quality control to evaluate the performance of each assay.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Performance differed substantially among assays and only one assay was found useful for telomere length estimation in humpback whales. The most notable factors causing these inter-assay differences were primer design and choice of using singleplex or multiplex assays. Inferred amplification efficiencies differed by up to 40% depending on assay and quantification method, however this variation only affected telomere length estimates in the worst performing assays.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our results suggest that seemingly well performing qPCR assays may contain biases that will only be detected by extensive quality control. Moreover, we show that the qPCR method for telomere length estimation can be highly precise and accurate, and thus suitable for telomere measurement in non-model species, if effort is devoted to optimization at all experimental and analytical steps. We conclude by highlighting a set of quality controls which may serve for further standardization of the qPCR method for telomere length estimation, and discuss some of the factors that may cause variation in qPCR experiments.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2156/13/77Quantitative PCRTelomere lengthQuality controlNon-model speciesGuidelines
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olsen Morten
Bérubé Martine
Robbins Jooke
Palsbøll Per J
spellingShingle Olsen Morten
Bérubé Martine
Robbins Jooke
Palsbøll Per J
Empirical evaluation of humpback whale telomere length estimates; quality control and factors causing variability in the singleplex and multiplex qPCR methods
BMC Genetics
Quantitative PCR
Telomere length
Quality control
Non-model species
Guidelines
author_facet Olsen Morten
Bérubé Martine
Robbins Jooke
Palsbøll Per J
author_sort Olsen Morten
title Empirical evaluation of humpback whale telomere length estimates; quality control and factors causing variability in the singleplex and multiplex qPCR methods
title_short Empirical evaluation of humpback whale telomere length estimates; quality control and factors causing variability in the singleplex and multiplex qPCR methods
title_full Empirical evaluation of humpback whale telomere length estimates; quality control and factors causing variability in the singleplex and multiplex qPCR methods
title_fullStr Empirical evaluation of humpback whale telomere length estimates; quality control and factors causing variability in the singleplex and multiplex qPCR methods
title_full_unstemmed Empirical evaluation of humpback whale telomere length estimates; quality control and factors causing variability in the singleplex and multiplex qPCR methods
title_sort empirical evaluation of humpback whale telomere length estimates; quality control and factors causing variability in the singleplex and multiplex qpcr methods
publisher BMC
series BMC Genetics
issn 1471-2156
publishDate 2012-09-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Telomeres, the protective cap of chromosomes, have emerged as powerful markers of biological age and life history in model and non-model species. The qPCR method for telomere length estimation is one of the most common methods for telomere length estimation, but has received recent critique for being too error-prone and yielding unreliable results. This critique coincides with an increasing awareness of the potentials and limitations of the qPCR technique in general and the proposal of a general set of guidelines (MIQE) for standardization of experimental, analytical, and reporting steps of qPCR. In order to evaluate the utility of the qPCR method for telomere length estimation in non-model species, we carried out four different qPCR assays directed at humpback whale telomeres, and subsequently performed a rigorous quality control to evaluate the performance of each assay.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Performance differed substantially among assays and only one assay was found useful for telomere length estimation in humpback whales. The most notable factors causing these inter-assay differences were primer design and choice of using singleplex or multiplex assays. Inferred amplification efficiencies differed by up to 40% depending on assay and quantification method, however this variation only affected telomere length estimates in the worst performing assays.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our results suggest that seemingly well performing qPCR assays may contain biases that will only be detected by extensive quality control. Moreover, we show that the qPCR method for telomere length estimation can be highly precise and accurate, and thus suitable for telomere measurement in non-model species, if effort is devoted to optimization at all experimental and analytical steps. We conclude by highlighting a set of quality controls which may serve for further standardization of the qPCR method for telomere length estimation, and discuss some of the factors that may cause variation in qPCR experiments.</p>
topic Quantitative PCR
Telomere length
Quality control
Non-model species
Guidelines
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2156/13/77
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