Journal: Expert review of proteomics
Article Title: The method developer's guide to oligonucleotide design.
doi: 10.1080/14789450.2024.2318565
Figure Lengend Snippet: Figure 2. (a) A schematic presentation of the oligonucleotide design for variants of in situ PLA. (A) By just adding a compaction oligonucleotide, the RCA product of a regular in situ PLA will be condensed into a much smaller object. All other oligonucleotides are the same as in Figure 1. Addition of a three mismatched 2 ´-O-methyl-RNA at the 3´ends of the detection oligonucleotides and the compaction oligonucleotide is required to perform RCA combined with detection. (b) The circularization oligonucleotide 1 of the regular in situ PLA was replaced with three variants, having different detection elements (F, G or H), which can be targeted with the cognate detection oligonucleotide. All other oligonucleotides are the same as in Figure 1. The 3´end of the oligonucleotides are indicated as arrowheads, the sequences are written 5´ to 3´. (c) A tag sequence (F, G or H) was incorporated into proximity probe oligonucleotide 2 to allow multiplexing. The sequence of proximity probe oligonucleotide 1 and the circularization oligonucleotides are the same as the regular in situ PLA (Figure 1), with the addition of the tag oligonucleotides F´, G´ and H´. The DNA circles formed in the proximity sensing will contain the tag sequence corresponding to the specific proximity probe oligonucleotide 2. (d) To detect tertiary proximity events, we utilized the regular in situ PLA design, with addition of a third proximity probe oligonucleotide. Circularization oligonucleotide 2 was exchanged with two new ones, i.e. circularization oligonucleotide 3 and 4. All other oligonucleotides are the same as in Figure 1. The 3´end of the oligonucleotides are indicated as arrowheads, the sequences are written 5´ to 3´.
Article Snippet: A beautiful oligonucleotide design to produce a long double stranded DNA molecule was developed by the Pierce lab almost two decades ago, called hybridization chain reaction (HCR) [18].
Techniques: In Situ, Sequencing, Multiplexing