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Technical Advances |


From the Department of Pathology,*
University of Utah
School of Medicine, and the Associated and Regional University
Pathologists Institute for Clinical and Experimental
Pathology,
Salt Lake City, Utah
DNA molecules differing by as little as a single-base
substitution have traditionally been distinguished by gel
electrophoresis-based methodologies that exploit differences in the
sequence-specific properties of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) such as
melting temperature and secondary conformational configuration. By
comparison, solution-based fluorescence methods using
sequence-specific probes are limited to detecting mutations restricted
to very short segments of DNA (
20 bp). We describe a solution-based
fluorescence method that discriminates between wild-type and mutant
sequences using a dsDNA binding dye, and interrogates a region
of >200 nucleotides. This method is based on melting theory and
entails fluorescence monitoring of the melting temperatures of
GC-clamped amplicons subjected to gradual and progressive thermal
denaturation in the presence of a constant concentration of urea.
Heterozygous samples are easily identified by the lower melting
temperatures of the less thermodynamically stable heteroduplex
mismatches from the wild-type:mutant DNA hybrids as compared to the
more stable wild-type Watson-Crick duplexes. All of the four possible
sets of mismatches (A·G/T·C, T·G/A·C,
G·G/C·C, and T·T/A·A) represented in 17 heterozygous
mutations distributed throughout the length of 20 different amplicons
(104 to 212 bp), were distinguished from the wild-type by their
altered melting profiles. This methodology is advantageous in that it
obviates gel electrophoresis or labeled oligonucleotide probes.
Significantly, it expands the region of interrogation for
detection of single-base changes using fluorescence-based methods in
solution, and is amenable for automation and adaptation to
high-throughput systems.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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C. T. Wittwer, G. H. Reed, C. N. Gundry, J. G. Vandersteen, and R. J. Pryor High-Resolution Genotyping by Amplicon Melting Analysis Using LCGreen Clin. Chem., June 1, 2003; 49(6): 853 - 860. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C. N. Gundry, J. G. Vandersteen, G. H. Reed, R. J. Pryor, J. Chen, and C. T. Wittwer Amplicon Melting Analysis with Labeled Primers: A Closed-Tube Method for Differentiating Homozygotes and Heterozygotes Clin. Chem., March 1, 2003; 49(3): 396 - 406. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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