Genome-Wide Analysis of Long Noncoding RNA Turnover

Genome-wide analysis for determining RNA turnover is an advanced method in RNA biology that examines the specific half-life of nuclear noncoding RNA (ncRNA). In particular, a pulse-labeling method using uridine analogs enables the determination of RNA stability under physiologically undisturbed conditions. The technique involves pulse labeling of endogenous RNAs in mammalian cells with 5′-bromo-uridine (BrU), followed by measuring the chronological decrease of BrU-labeled RNAs using deep sequencing. The method is called BrU immunoprecipitation chase assay (BRIC) or BRIC through deep sequencing (BRIC-seq). Here, we describe a detailed protocol and technical tips for BRIC-seq.
Source: Springer protocols feed by Genetics/Genomics - Category: Genetics & Stem Cells Source Type: news
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