The tagged microarray marker (TAM) method for high-throughput detection of single nucleotide and indel polymorphisms

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Jing, R., Bolshakov, V. and Flavell, A. J. (2007) The tagged microarray marker (TAM) method for high-throughput detection of single nucleotide and indel polymorphisms. Nat Protoc, 2 (1). pp. 168-77. ISSN 1750-2799

Abstract/Summary

The tagged microarray marker (TAM) method allows high-throughput differentiation between predicted alternative PCR products. Typically, the method is used as a molecular marker approach to determining the allelic states of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) or insertion-deletion (indel) alleles at genomic loci in multiple individuals. Biotin-labeled PCR products are spotted, unpurified, onto a streptavidin-coated glass slide and the alternative products are differentiated by hybridization to fluorescent detector oligonucleotides that recognize corresponding allele-specific tags on the PCR primers. The main attractions of this method are its high throughput (thousands of PCRs are analyzed per slide), flexibility of scoring (any combination, from a single marker in thousands of samples to thousands of markers in a single sample, can be analyzed) and flexibility of scale (any experimental scale, from a small lab setting up to a large project). This protocol describes an experiment involving 3,072 PCRs scored on a slide. The whole process from the start of PCR setup to receiving the data spreadsheet takes 2 d.

Item Type Article
URI https://reading-clone.eprints-hosting.org/id/eprint/10024
Refereed Yes
Divisions Life Sciences > School of Biological Sciences
Uncontrolled Keywords Biotin, DNA Transposable Elements/*genetics, Fluorescence, Genetic Markers/*genetics, Microarray Analysis/*methods, Oligonucleotides, Polymerase Chain Reaction/*methods, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide/*genetics
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