Preparation of Multiplexed Small RNA Libraries From Plants

Bio Protoc. 2014 Nov 5;4(21):e1275. doi: 10.21769/bioprotoc.1275.

Abstract

High-throughput sequencing is a powerful tool for exploring small RNA populations in plants. The ever-increasing output from an Illumina Sequencing System allows for multiplexing multiple samples while still obtaining sufficient data for small RNA discovery and characterization. Here we describe a protocol for generating multiplexed small RNA libraries for sequencing up to 12 samples in one lane of an Illumina HiSeq System single-end, 50 base pair run. RNA ligases are used to add the 3' and 5' adaptors to purified small RNAs; ligation products that lack a small RNA molecule (adaptor-adaptor products) are intentionally depleted. After cDNA synthesis, a linear PCR step amplifies the DNA fragments. The 3' PCR primers used here include unique 6-nucleotide sequences to allow for multiplexing up to 12 samples.