| Literature DB >> 18832461 |
Kenji Tatsumi1, Yasumasa Mitani, Jun Watanabe, Hideki Takakura, Kanako Hoshi, Yuki Kawai, Takeshi Kikuchi, Yasushi Kogo, Atsuko Oguchi-Katayama, Yasuhiro Tomaru, Hajime Kanamori, Masaru Baba, Takefumi Ishidao, Kengo Usui, Masayoshi Itoh, Paul E Cizdziel, Alexander Lezhava, Michio Ueda, Yasushi Ichikawa, Itaru Endo, Shinji Togo, Hiroshi Shimada, Yoshihide Hayashizaki.
Abstract
Previously, the smart amplification process version 2 (SMAP-2) was developed to detect mutations from tissue and in crude cell lysates and has been used for rapid diagnosis of specific somatic mutations with single-nucleotide precision. The purpose of this study was to develop a rapid and practical method to detect cancer and metastasis in specimens using the SMAP-2 assay. We developed modified SMAP-2 assays that enabled detection of any change in a single codon using a single assay. Rapid SMAP-2 screening assays are suitable for routine clinical identification of critical amino acid substitutions such as codon 12 mutations in KRAS. Primers bracketing the first two nucleotides of KRAS codon 12 were designed so that all possible alleles would be amplified by the SMAP-2 assay. In combination with the peptide nucleic acid (PNA) with exact homology to the wild-type allele, our assay amplified all mutant alleles except for the wild-type sequence. With this new assay design (termed PNA-clamp SMAP-2), we could detect KRAS mutations within 60 minutes, including sample preparation. We compared results from PNA-clamp SMAP-2 assay, polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism, and direct sequencing of clinical samples from pancreatic cancer patients and demonstrated perfect concordance. The PNA-clamp SMAP-2 method is a rapid, simple, and highly sensitive detection assay for cancer mutations.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18832461 PMCID: PMC2570635 DOI: 10.2353/jmoldx.2008.080024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Diagn ISSN: 1525-1578 Impact factor: 5.568