Abstract

A partial length ovalbumin cDNA-silica was produced using primer extension of (dT)18-silica with annealed partial ovalbumin RNA and reverse transcriptase. This cDNA-silica was used to test whether full-length ovalbumin RNA could be selectively purified in the presence of a large excess of other (mouse muscle) RNA. The cDNA-silica synthesized had minimally 60 pmol cDNA per gram silica and had a capacity for full-length ovalbumin RNA of minimally 38 μg/g. Even when other RNA was present in greater than 1000-fold excess, ovalbumin RNA was selectively retained by the cDNA-silica and was eluted in yields of 43% with an enrichment which varied over the range of 29–162-fold in various experiments. These results show that even rare RNAs can be selectively purified in high yield using cDNA-silica. The importance of these results to hybrid selection and subtractive library preparation is discussed.

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