| Literature DB >> 24897111 |
Vitaly Zinkevich1, Nelly Sapojnikova2, Julian Mitchell3, Tamar Kartvelishvili2, Nino Asatiani2, Samia Alkhalil1, Irina Bogdarina1, Abdulmohsen A Al-Humam4.
Abstract
A critical step in biochip design is the selection of probes with identical hybridisation characteristics. In this article we describe a novel method for evaluating DNA hybridisation probes, allowing the fine-tuning of biochips, that uses cassettes with multiple probes. Each cassette contains probes in equimolar proportions so that their hybridisation performance can be assessed in a single reaction. The model used to demonstrate this method was a series of probes developed to detect TORCH pathogens. DNA probes were designed for Toxoplasma gondii, Chlamidia trachomatis, Rubella, Cytomegalovirus, and Herpes virus and these were used to construct the DNA cassettes. Five cassettes were constructed to detect TORCH pathogens using a variety of genes coding for membrane proteins, viral matrix protein, an early expressed viral protein, viral DNA polymerase and the repetitive gene B1 of Toxoplasma gondii. All of these probes, except that for the B1 gene, exhibited similar profiles under the same hybridisation conditions. The failure of the B1 gene probe to hybridise was not due to a position effect, and this indicated that the probe was unsuitable for inclusion in the biochip. The redesigned probe for the B1 gene exhibited identical hybridisation properties to the other probes, suitable for inclusion in a biochip.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24897111 PMCID: PMC4045846 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0098596
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of the probes used in this study.
| Probe name | Target Species | Gene name | GenBank accession no | Sequence 5′→3′ | Tm °C | G+C % |
|
|
| MOMP | X55700 |
| 59.1 | 43.5 |
|
|
| MOMP | X55700 |
| 60.0 | 52.6 |
|
|
| Cryptic plasmid | X07547 |
| 60.0 | 50 |
|
|
| B1 | AF179871 |
| 60.0 | 47.5 |
|
|
| B1 | AF179871 |
| 59.2 | 52.6 |
|
|
| B1 | AF179871 |
| 60.3 | 50.0 |
|
|
| B1 | AF179871 |
| 58.0 | 50.0 |
|
|
| IE | M11630 K01090 |
| 59.9 | 50.0 |
|
|
| pp65 | M15120 |
| 58.3 | 52.6 |
|
|
| DNA polymerase | M16321 |
| 58.6 | 52.6 |
|
|
| E1 | JX047998 |
| 60.5 | 50.0 |
|
|
| 16S rRNA | Y14745 |
| 60.0 | 50.0 |
Figure 1Schematic diagrams and quantitative analysis of the designed cassettes hybridization with biochip.
The arrangement of the probes on the biochips (panels A, B, C, and D) was as follows: a1, a2 – CT1; a3, a4 – HSV; a5 – RV; b1, b2 – CT2; b3, b4 – TOXO1; b5 – RV; c1, c2 – CT3; c3, c4 – TOXO2; d1, d2 – CMV1; d3, d4 – TOXO3; e1, e2 – CMV2; e3, e4 –TOXO4; e5 – bacterial DNA (negative control); c5, d5 were left empty to give background signals. White circles represent gene probes that hybridized with the respective targets on the cassette; grey circles represent gene probes that showed no hybridization and background. Error bars in the histograms are from three replicates and present the results of the Student's t-Tests procedure (*p<0.05). Panel (A) Cassette N1 shows the hybridization signals for three Chlamydia trachomatis probes (probes CT1 and CT2), and for a cryptic plasmid sequence (probe CT3). Panel (B) shows the hybridization signals for the probes CMV1 and CMV2 for Cytomegalovirus, the probe HSV for Herpes simplex virus (HSV), the TOXO1 probe for Toxoplasma gondii (TOXO1), and the RV probe for Rubela virus (RV) with cassettes N2 (shaded grey in the histogram) and cassette N3 (shaded black in the histogram). Panel (C) shows the hybridization patterns for the probes TOXO1, TOXO2, TOXO3 and TOXO4 for Toxoplasma gondii with cassette N4, revealing that the TOXO1 probe was unsuitable for inclusion in the TORCH biochip. Panel (D) shows the hybridization signals for probes CT1, CMV2, HSV, RV, and TOXO2 with cassette N5.