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). The efficiency of the RT reaction was greatly improved by increasing both background RNA and primer concentrations, but the benefit provided by background RNA was source dependent. At a given target concentration, similar RT efficiencies were achieved with gene-specific primers and random hexamers, but the latter required much higher concentrations. With random hexamers, we observed a systematic variation in RT reaction efficiency as a function of target concentration. Using an RNA standard curve that was also subject to RT effectively normalized for this systematic variability, but the assay accuracy depended critically on the length of the standard RNA extending to the 3' end of the qPCR target site. Our results shed some light on previous contradictory conclusions in the literature, and provide insights that may aid in the design of RT-qPCR assays and the design of synthetic RNA standards when full-length material is not available.
Miranda et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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