A nucleic acid photocross-linking technology was used in the development of a direct assay for factor V Leiden, a point mutation in the factor V gene (G1691A) that is the most common inherited risk factor for thrombosis. This cross-linking hybridization assay included two allele-specific capture probes and six signal-generating reporter probes; all were modified with a photoactivated cross-linking compound, By using two different capture probes complementary to a 16-base sequence at the factor V Leiden mutation site, but differing in the nucleotide opposite the mutation site (C vs T), wild-type and factor V Leiden alleles Were differentiated in purified DNA specimens. The assay was also successfully applied to genomic DNA in leukocytes isolated from whole blood; the factor V status of 122 patients as determined by this method was in complete concordance with a standard PCR-based assay and clearly discriminated between healthy individuals and factor V Leiden heterozygotes.
CITATION STYLE
Zehnder, J., Van Atta, R., Jones, C., Sussman, H., & Wood, M. (1997). Cross-linking hybridization assay for direct detection of factor V Leiden mutation. In Clinical Chemistry (Vol. 43, pp. 1703–1708). American Association for Clinical Chemistry Inc. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/43.9.1703
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