Suppression subtractive hybridization: a method for generating differentially regulated or tissue-specific cDNA probes and libraries.

Luda Diatchenko(Takara (United States)), Yun‐Fai Chris Lau(Takara (United States)), A. Patricia Campbell(Takara (United States)), Alex Chenchik(Takara (United States)), F. Moqadam(Takara (United States)), Betty Huang(Takara (United States)), Sergey Lukyanov(Takara (United States)), Konstantin A. Lukyanov(Takara (United States)), Nadya G. Gurskaya(Takara (United States)), Е. Д. Свердлов(Takara (United States)), Paul D. Siebert(Takara (United States))
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
June 11, 1996
Cited by 3,029Open Access

Abstract

A new and highly effective method, termed suppression subtractive hybridization (SSH), has been developed for the generation of subtracted cDNA libraries. It is based primarily on a recently described technique called suppression PCR and combines normalization and subtraction in a single procedure. The normalization step equalizes the abundance of cDNAs within the target population and the subtraction step excludes the common sequences between the target and driver populations. In a model system, the SSH technique enriched for rare sequences over 1,000-fold in one round of subtractive hybridization. We demonstrate its usefulness by generating a testis-specific cDNA library and by using the subtracted cDNA mixture as a hybridization probe to identify homologous sequences in a human Y chromosome cosmid library. The human DNA inserts in the isolated cosmids were further confirmed to be expressed in a testis-specific manner. These results suggest that the SSH technique is applicable to many molecular genetic and positional cloning studies for the identification of disease, developmental, tissue-specific, or other differentially expressed genes.


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