Hi there,
I want to know which gene is the best internal control for RT-PCR. I usually use b-actin as a control, however, it sometimes seems to express differently in cells after certain treatment. I am not sure if the changes are really due to regulated expression or just technical issues.
Thanks.
Kawaka
Which gene is the best internal control for RT-PCR
Started by kawaka, May 25 2004 01:58 PM
4 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 25 May 2004 - 01:58 PM
#2
Posted 25 May 2004 - 04:19 PM
Beta-actin is not proper control especially when cell culture condition is different (2D, monolayer vs. 3D, suspension). Beta-actin will be much lower in 3D culture.
5S rRNA is the best control we use to correct this problem.
5S rRNA is the best control we use to correct this problem.
#3
Posted 26 May 2004 - 01:39 PM
To be a good internal control, a gene should have a constant basal level of expression which is consistent, non-regulated and independent of the cell-cycle. b-actin expression has been found by a number of studies to be influenced by some factors such as by matrigel, thus is not a ideal internal control. Instead, 18S rRNA shows less variance in expression across a variety of treatment conditions than b-actin and GAPDH. However because expression of 18S rRNA is very abundant, PCR conditions such as the ratio of control to target gene primers need to be optimized, otherwise amplification of 18S rRNA can exhaust reaction reagents quickly.
Edited by pcrman, 26 May 2004 - 09:42 PM.
#4
Posted 02 June 2004 - 08:38 PM
how about beta-tubulin?
#5
Posted 07 June 2004 - 07:42 PM
in our lab, histone H4 is generally used as internal control. it has uniform expression across cell lines aas far as i know














