Bidirectional
Direct Sequencing of Noncanonical RNA
by Two-Dimensional Analysis of Mass Chromatograms
Version 2 2015-11-23, 05:43Version 2 2015-11-23, 05:43
Version 1 2015-11-23, 05:43Version 1 2015-11-23, 05:43
Posted on 2015-11-23 - 05:43
Mass
spectrometry (MS) is a powerful technique for characterizing
noncanonical nucleobases and other chemical modifications in small
RNAs, yielding rich chemical information that is complementary to
high-throughput indirect sequencing. However, mass spectra are often
prohibitively complex when fragment ions are analyzed following either
solution phase hydrolysis or gas phase fragmentation. For all but
the simplest cases, ions arising from multiple fragmentation events,
alternative fragmentation pathways, and diverse salt adducts frequently
obscure desired single-cut fragment ions. Here we show that it is
possible to take advantage of predictable regularities in liquid chromatographic
(LC) separation of optimized RNA digests to greatly simplify the interpretation
of complex MS data. A two-dimensional analysis of extracted compound
chromatograms permits straightforward and robust de novo sequencing,
using a novel Monte Carlo algorithm that automatically generates bidirectional
paired-end reads, pinpointing the position of modified nucleotides
in a sequence. We demonstrate that these advances permit routine LC–MS
sequencing of RNAs containing noncanonical nucleotides, and we furthermore
examine the applicability of this approach to the study of oligonucleotides
containing artificial modifications as well as those commonly observed
in post-transcriptionally modified RNAs.
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Björkbom, Anders; Lelyveld, Victor S.; Zhang, Shenglong; Zhang, Weicheng; Tam, Chun Pong; Blain, J. Craig; et al. (2015). Bidirectional
Direct Sequencing of Noncanonical RNA
by Two-Dimensional Analysis of Mass Chromatograms. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.5b09438