RNA-DNA hybrid (R-loop) immunoprecipitation mapping: an analytical workflow to evaluate inherent biases

  1. Lóránt Székvölgyi1,2
  1. 1MTA-DE Momentum, Genome Architecture and Recombination Research Group, Research Centre for Molecular Medicine, University of Debrecen, 4032 Debrecen, Hungary;
  2. 2Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Debrecen, 4032 Debrecen, Hungary;
  3. 3Department of Internal Medicine, University of Debrecen, 4032 Debrecen, Hungary;
  4. 4Department of Biopharmacy, University of Debrecen, 4032 Debrecen, Hungary;
  5. 5Department of Immunology, University of Debrecen, 4032 Debrecen, Hungary
  1. Corresponding author: lorantsz{at}med.unideb.hu
  1. 6 These authors are joint first authors and contributed equally to this work.

Abstract

The impact of R-loops on the physiology and pathology of chromosomes has been demonstrated extensively by chromatin biology research. The progress in this field has been driven by technological advancement of R-loop mapping methods that largely relied on a single approach, DNA-RNA immunoprecipitation (DRIP). Most of the DRIP protocols use the experimental design that was developed by a few laboratories, without paying attention to the potential caveats that might affect the outcome of RNA-DNA hybrid mapping. To assess the accuracy and utility of this technology, we pursued an analytical approach to estimate inherent biases and errors in the DRIP protocol. By performing DRIP-sequencing, qPCR, and receiver operator characteristic (ROC) analysis, we tested the effect of formaldehyde fixation, cell lysis temperature, mode of genome fragmentation, and removal of free RNA on the efficacy of RNA-DNA hybrid detection and implemented workflows that were able to distinguish complex and weak DRIP signals in a noisy background with high confidence. We also show that some of the workflows perform poorly and generate random answers. Furthermore, we found that the most commonly used genome fragmentation method (restriction enzyme digestion) led to the overrepresentation of lengthy DRIP fragments over coding ORFs, and this bias was enhanced at the first exons. Biased genome sampling severely compromised mapping resolution and prevented the assignment of precise biological function to a significant fraction of R-loops. The revised workflow presented herein is established and optimized using objective ROC analyses and provides reproducible and highly specific RNA-DNA hybrid detection.

Footnotes

  • Received December 8, 2016.
  • Accepted March 23, 2017.

This article is distributed exclusively by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the first six months after the full-issue publication date (see http://genome.cshlp.org/site/misc/terms.xhtml). After six months, it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.

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