Presenilin-1 detection in brain neurons and FOXP3 in peripheral blood mononuclear cells: normalizer gene selection for real time reverse transcriptase pcr using the deltadeltaCt method

TitlePresenilin-1 detection in brain neurons and FOXP3 in peripheral blood mononuclear cells: normalizer gene selection for real time reverse transcriptase pcr using the deltadeltaCt method
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2005
AuthorsDuran, EM, Shapshak, P, Worley, J, Minagar, A, Ziegler, F, Haliko, S, Moleon-Borodowski, I, Haslett, PAJ
JournalFrontiers in Bioscience: A Journal and Virtual Library
Volume10
Pagination2955-65
Date Published09/2005
KeywordsExternal, Forkhead Transcription Factors, Presenilin-1
Abstract

Quantification of gene expression is important to confirm changes in levels of gene expression in disease. Prior quantification methods include standard curves, absolute quantification, and relative quantification. This paper describes an analytic method for the relative quantification of Presenilin-1 (PS-1) in neurons and Forkhead-box (FOX) p3 in PBMNCs using real-time PCR analytic techniques. A comparative Ct method (deltadelatCt) is described in which the quantity of target normalized to a normalizer gene reference is given by 2-deltadelatCt where deltadelatCt = [Ct of the gene of interest in the unknown specimen - Ct normalizer gene in the unknown specimen] - [Ct of the gene of interest in the calibrator specimen - Ct normalizer gene in the calibrator specimen]. The calibrator specimen is ideally from a non-treated control specimen and is analyzed on every assay plate with the unknown specimens of interest. The use of the deltadelatCt methodology allows for a higher throughput and a more economical approach to investigate gene expression. We applied this methodology to the quantification of PS-1 and FOXp3 genes and compare the levels of expression by normalizing to different normalizer genes using the deltadelatCt methodology. We find that use of GAPDH is the optimum normalizer gene for the genes analyzed in neurons from human brain and in PBMNCs.

URLhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15970549