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Clinical Chemistry 0: clinchem.2007.090761v1, 2007; 10.1373/clinchem.2007.090761
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Received on April 23, 2007
Accepted on July 27, 2007

Infectious Disease

Unlabeled Probes for the Detection and Typing of Herpes Simplex Virus

Shale Dames 1*, David C. Pattison 1, L. Kathryn Bromley 1, Carl T. Wittwer 2, Karl V. Voelkerding 2

1 ARUP Institute for Clinical and Experimental Pathology, Salt Lake City, UT
2 ARUP Institute for Clinical and Experimental Pathology, Salt Lake City, UT, and Department of Pathology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: shale.dames{at}aruplab.com.

Background: Unlabeled probe detection with a double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) binding dye is one method to detect and confirm target amplification after PCR. Unlabeled probes and amplicon melting have been used to detect small deletions and single-nucleotide polymorphisms in assays where template is in abundance. Unlabeled probes have not been applied to low-level target detection, however.

Methods: Herpes simplex virus (HSV) was chosen as a model to compare the unlabeled probe method to an in-house reference assay using dual-labeled, minor groove binding probes. A saturating dsDNA dye (LCGreen® Plus) was used for real-time PCR. HSV-1, HSV-2, and an internal control were differentiated by PCR amplicon and unlabeled probe melting analysis after PCR.

Results: The unlabeled probe technique displayed 98% concordance with the reference assay for the detection of HSV from a variety of archived clinical samples (n = 182). HSV typing using unlabeled probes was 99% concordant (n = 104) to sequenced clinical samples and allowed for the detection of sequence polymorphisms in the amplicon and under the probe.

Conclusions: Unlabeled probes and amplicon melting can be used to detect and genotype as few as 10 copies of target per reaction, restricted only by stochastic limitations. The use of unlabeled probes provides an attractive alternative to conventional fluorescence-labeled, probe-based assays for genotyping and detection of HSV and might be useful for other low-copy targets where typing is informative.




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