A branched DNA signal amplification assay for quantification of nucleic acid targets below 100 molecules/ml

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Abstract

The branched DNA hybridization assay has been improved by the inclusion of the novel nucleotides, isoC and isoG, in the amplification sequences to prevent non-specific hybridization. The novel isoC, isoG-containing amplification sequences have no detectable interaction with any natural DNA sequence. The control of non-specific hybridization in turn permits increased signal amplification. Addition of a 14 site preamplifier was found to increase the signal/noise ratio 8-fold. A set of 74 oligonucleotide probes was designed to the consensus HIV POL sequence. The detection limit of this new HIV branched DNA amplifier assay was ~50 molecules/ml. The assay was used to measure viral load in 87 plasma samples of HIV-infected patients on triple drug therapy whose RNA titers were < 500 molecules/ml. In all 11 patients viral load eventually declined to below the detection limit with the new assay.

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Collins, M. L., Irvine, B., Tyner, D., Fine, E., Zayati, C., Chang, C. A., … Ho, D. D. (1997). A branched DNA signal amplification assay for quantification of nucleic acid targets below 100 molecules/ml. Nucleic Acids Research, 25(15), 2979–2984. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/25.15.2979

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