Abstract

BackgroundMismatched oligonucleotides are widely used on microarrays to differentiate specific from nonspecific hybridization. While many experiments rely on such oligos, the hybridization behavior of various degrees of mismatch (MM) structure has not been extensively studied. Here, we present the results of two large-scale microarray experiments on S. cerevisiae and H. sapiens genomic DNA, to explore MM oligonucleotide behavior with real sample mixtures under tiling-array conditions.ResultsWe examined all possible nucleotide substitutions at the central position of 36-nucleotide probes, and found that nonspecific binding by MM oligos depends upon the individual nucleotide substitutions they incorporate: C→A, C→G and T→A (yielding purine-purine mispairs) are most disruptive, whereas A→X were least disruptive. We also quantify a marked GC skew effect: substitutions raising probe GC content exhibit higher intensity (and vice versa). This skew is small in highly-expressed regions (± 0.5% of total intensity range) and large (± 2% or more) elsewhere. Multiple mismatches per oligo are largely additive in effect: each MM added in a distributed fashion causes an additional 21% intensity drop relative to PM, three-fold more disruptive than adding adjacent mispairs (7% drop per MM).ConclusionWe investigate several parameters for oligonucleotide design, including the effects of each central nucleotide substitution on array signal intensity and of multiple MM per oligo. To avoid GC skew, individual substitutions should not alter probe GC content. RNA sample mixture complexity may increase the amount of nonspecific hybridization, magnify GC skew and boost the intensity of MM oligos at all levels.

Highlights

  • Mismatched oligonucleotides are widely used on microarrays to differentiate specific from nonspecific hybridization

  • Genomic regions from seven S. cerevisiae genes and three human genes were tiled with perfect match (PM) and mismatch (MM) oligos, the arrays were probed and the resulting intensities normalized as outlined in the Methods section

  • Four distinct classes of MM oligo were employed: SingleCenter, wherein the nucleotide at the center position (18) is changed; centered, wherein mismatch bases are added incrementally from the center of the oligo; staggered, wherein mismatch bases are distributed throughout the length of the oligo; and deletion, wherein the center position (18) is removed, and the oligo is elongated by adding the base in genomic sequence

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Summary

Introduction

Mismatched oligonucleotides are widely used on microarrays to differentiate specific from nonspecific hybridization. We present the results of two large-scale microarray experiments on S. cerevisiae and H. sapiens genomic DNA, to explore MM oligonucleotide behavior with real sample mixtures under tiling-array conditions. Oligonucleotide tiling arrays are a popular tool for detecting transcriptionally active regions on a genomic scale. They comprise short oligomeric probes (generally 25–70 bp) immobilized on a slide surface; a typical custom-built tiling array today contains about 400,000 features. The principle behind microarray analysis is similar to that of traditional hybridization using nitrocellulose membranes [2]: When fluorescently-labeled sample (target) is applied to the array-bound features (probes), complementary regions of probe and target DNA will anneal to form a stable duplex. Any probe whose complementary target is present in the sample mixture should bind fluorescent label

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