| Literature DB >> 23236486 |
Elena Castellanos-Rizaldos1, Coren Audrey Milbury, G Mike Makrigiorgos.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Multiplex detection of low-level mutant alleles in the presence of wild-type DNA would be useful for several fields of medicine including cancer, pre-natal diagnosis and infectious diseases. COLD-PCR is a recently developed method that enriches low-level mutations during PCR cycling, thus enhancing downstream detection without the need for special reagents or equipment. The approach relies on the differential denaturation of DNA strands which contain Tm-lowering mutations or mismatches, versus 'homo-duplex' wild-type DNA. Enabling multiplex-COLD-PCR that can enrich mutations in several amplicons simultaneously is desirable but technically difficult to accomplish. Here we describe the proof of principle of an emulsion-PCR based approach that demonstrates the feasibility of multiplexed-COLD-PCR within a single tube, using commercially available mutated cell lines. This method works best with short amplicons; therefore, it could potentially be used on highly fragmented samples obtained from biological material or FFPE specimens.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23236486 PMCID: PMC3516544 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0051362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Temperature-tolerant-fast-COLD-PCR in emulsion: Overview of the steps involved.
Multiplex pre-amplification from genomic DNA; emulsification with gene-specific primers; mixing into a single tube; and temperature-tolerant emulsion-based fast-COLD-PCR.
Cell lines used in the present study.
| Gene and amplicon | Cell line | Mutation (nt) | Mutation (aa) | |
|
| Exon 6 | SNU-182 | c.644G>T | p.S215I |
| Exon 7 | HCC2157 | c.742C>T | p.R248W | |
| Exon 8 | SW480 | c.818G>A | p.R273H | |
| Exon 9 | SW480 | c.925C>T | p.P309S | |
Primer sequences used in this study.
| Gene and amplicons | PCR Round | Primer sequences (5' to 3') | Amplicon size (bp) | |
|
| Pre-amplification (multiplex reaction) | Exon 2–3 |
| 350 |
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| Exon 4 |
| 486 | ||
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| Exon 5–6 |
| 517 | ||
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| Exon 7 |
| 235 | ||
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| Exon 8–9 |
| 441 | ||
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| Exon 10 |
| 243 | ||
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| Exon 11 |
| 222 | ||
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| TT- | Exon 6 |
| 144 |
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| Exon 7 |
| 122 | ||
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| Exon 8 |
| 115 | ||
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| Exon 9 |
| 114 | ||
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Oligonucleotides (F) forward or (R) reverse.
Oligonucleotide sequences described before [21], [22].
Oligonucleotides from Castellanos et al. [16].
Primer sequences described previously [2], [17].
PCR thermocycling conditions utilized in the present work.
| PCR type | Step | Conditions |
|
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| Initial denaturation | 98°C for 30 s | |
| Thermocycling: 35 cycles | 98°C for 10 s | Exon 2–11 | |
| 55°C for 20 s | |||
| 72°C for 10 s | |||
| Extension | 72°C for 15 s | ||
| Stage 1 cycling: 5 times | 95°C for 10 s | ||
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| 72°C for 10 s | |||
| Stage 2 cycling: 8 times | 85.2°C for 10 s | ||
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| 72°C for 10 s | |||
| Stage 3 cycling: 8 times | 85.5°C for 10 s | ||
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| 72°C for 10 s | |||
| Stage 4 cycling: 8 times | 85.8°C for 10 s | ||
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| 72°C for 10 s | |||
| Stage 5 cycling: 8 times | 86.1°C for 10 s | ||
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| 72°C for 10 s | |||
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| Stage 6 cycling: 8 times | 86.4°C for 10 s | Exon 6–9 |
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| 72°C for 10 s | |||
| Stage 7 cycling: 8 times | 86.7°C for 10 s | ||
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| 72°C for 10 s | |||
| Stage 8 cycling: 8 times | 87°C for 10 s | ||
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| 72°C for 10 s | |||
| Stage 9 cycling: 8 times | 87.3°C for 10 s | ||
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| 72°C for 10 s | |||
| Stage 10 cycling: 8 times | 87.6°C for 10 s | ||
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| 72°C for 10 s | |||
| Stage 11 cycling: 8 times | 87.9°C for 10 s | ||
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| 72°C for 10 s | |||
| Stage 12 cycling: 8 times | 88.2°C for 10 s | ||
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| 72°C for 10 s | |||
| Stage 13 cycling: 8 times | 88.5°C for 10 s | ||
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| 72°C for 10 s |
Conditions from a previous study [22].
Figure 2Temperature-tolerant COLD-PCR in emulsion, TT-fast-eCOLD-PCR: Enrichment of mutations in multiple DNA sequences in a single tube.
A 5% mutation abundance was evaluated for TP53 gene exons 6–9 by conventional PCR (left panels) and TT-fast-eCOLD-PCR (right panels). Duplicate experiments are depicted in each case. The enrichment of the mutations in all four exons is estimated from the chromatograms.