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Dive into the research topics where Lori A. Neely is active.

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Featured researches published by Lori A. Neely.


Nature Methods | 2006

A single-molecule method for the quantitation of microRNA gene expression

Lori A. Neely; Sonal Patel; Joanne Garver; Michael Gallo; Maria Hackett; Stephen McLaughlin; Mark Nadel; John Harris; Steve Gullans; Jenny E. Rooke

MicroRNAs (miRNA) are short endogenous noncoding RNA molecules that regulate fundamental cellular processes such as cell differentiation, cell proliferation and apoptosis through modulation of gene expression. Critical to understanding the role of miRNAs in this regulation is a method to rapidly and accurately quantitate miRNA gene expression. Existing methods lack sensitivity, specificity and typically require upfront enrichment, ligation and/or amplification steps. The Direct miRNA assay hybridizes two spectrally distinguishable fluorescent locked nucleic acid (LNA)-DNA oligonucleotide probes to the miRNA of interest, and then tagged molecules are directly counted on a single-molecule detection instrument. In this study, we show the assay is sensitive to femtomolar concentrations of miRNA (500 fM), has a three-log linear dynamic range and is capable of distinguishing among miRNA family members. Using this technology, we quantified expression of 45 human miRNAs within 16 different tissues, yielding a quantitative differential expression profile that correlates and expands upon published results.


Lab on a Chip | 2006

Single DNA molecule stretching in sudden mixed shear and elongational microflows

Jonathan W. Larson; Gregory R. Yantz; Qun Zhong; Rebecca Charnas; Christina M. D’Antoni; Michael Gallo; Kimberly A. Gillis; Lori A. Neely; Kevin M. Phillips; Gordon G. Wong; Steven R. Gullans; Rudolf Gilmanshin

High-throughput stretching and monitoring of single DNA molecules in continuous elongational flow offers compelling advantages for biotechnology applications such as DNA mapping. However, the polymer dynamics in common microfluidic implementations are typically complicated by shear interactions. These effects were investigated by observation of fluorescently labeled 185 kb bacterial artificial chromosomes in sudden mixed shear and elongational microflows generated in funneled microfluidic channels. The extension of individual free DNA molecules was studied as a function of accumulated fluid strain and strain rate. Under constant or gradually changing strain rate conditions, stretching by the sudden elongational component proceeded as previously described for an ideal elongational flow (T. T. Perkins, D. E. Smith and S. Chu, Science, 1997, 276, 2016): first, increased accumulated fluid strain and increased strain rate produced higher stretching efficiencies, despite the complications of shear interactions; and second, the results were consistent with unstretched molecules predominantly in hairpin conformations. More abrupt strain rate profiles did not deliver a uniform population of highly extended molecules, highlighting the importance of balance between shear and elongational components in the microfluidic environment for DNA stretching applications. DNA sizing with up to 10% resolution was demonstrated. Overall, the device delivered 1000 stretched DNA molecules per minute in a method compatible with diffraction-limited optical sequence motif mapping and without requiring laborious chemical modifications of the DNA or the chip surface. Thus, the method is especially well suited for genetic characterization of DNA mixtures such as in pathogen fingerprinting amidst high levels of background DNA.


Archive | 2006

Single molecule miRNA-based disease diagnostic methods

Lori A. Neely; Sonal Patel


Archive | 2004

Methods and compositions related to the use of sequence-specific endonucleases for analyzing nucleic acids under non-cleaving conditions

Lori A. Neely; Maria Hackett


Nucleic Acids Research | 2003

Revised Escherichia coli selenocysteine insertion requirements determined by in vivo screening of combinatorial libraries of SECIS variants

Karen E. Sandman; Daniel F. Tardiff; Lori A. Neely; Christopher J. Noren


Archive | 2006

Methods and compositions for analysis of microRNA

Lori A. Neely; Maria Hackett


The Journal of Urology | 2008

MICRORNA EXPRESSION IN BLADDER CANCER: A RATIOMETRIC APPROACH IDENTIFIES INVASIVE POTENTIAL

Brasil Silva Neto; Kimberly M. Rieger-Christ; Lori A. Neely; Alexey Eroshkin; Joanne Garver; Sonal Patel; Nu A Phung; Stephen McLaughlin; Duncan Whitney; John A. Libertino; Ian C. Summerhayes


Archive | 2007

MicroRNAs: A single molecule method to quantify miRNA gene expression

Sonal Patel; Joanne Garver; Michael Gallo; Maria Hackett; Stephen McLaughlin; Steven R. Gullans; Mark Nadel; John Harris; Duncan Whitney; Lori A. Neely


Archive | 2006

Procédés et compositions pour l'analyse de microarn

Lori A. Neely; Maria Hackett; Sonal Patel


Archive | 2004

Procedes et compositions lies a l'utilisation d'endonucleases specifiques d'une sequence pour analyser des acides nucleiques dans des conditions de non-clivage

Lori A. Neely; Maria Hackett

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Steven R. Gullans

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Brasil Silva Neto

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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