Artifacts and biases of the reverse transcription reaction in RNA sequencing

Abstract

RNA sequencing has spurred a significant number of research areas in recent years. Most protocols rely on synthesizing a more stable complementary DNA (cDNA) copy of the RNA molecule during the reverse transcription reaction. The resulting cDNA pool is often wrongfully assumed to be quantitatively and molecularly similar to the original RNA input. Sadly, biases and artifacts confound the resulting cDNA mixture. These issues are often overlooked or ignored in the literature by those that rely on the reverse transcription process. In this review, we confront the reader with intra- and intersample biases and artifacts caused by the reverse transcription reaction during RNA sequencing experiments. To fight the reader’s despair, we also provide solutions to most issues and inform on good RNA sequencing practices. We hope the reader can use this review to their advantage, thereby contributing to scientifically sound RNA studies.

Publication
RNA
Jasper Verwilt
Jasper Verwilt
Doctoral Fellow (2019-2024)

The real Jasper

Pieter Mestdagh
Pieter Mestdagh
Professor

Studying non-coding RNAs in cancer.

Jo Vandesompele
Jo Vandesompele
Professor

RNA addict trying to connect all the dots