Publication | Open Access
Detection of sickle cell beta S-globin allele by hybridization with synthetic oligonucleotides.
533
Citations
27
References
1983
Year
Genetic TestingEngineeringGeneticsMolecular BiologyNucleic Acid Amplification TestMolecular GeneticsAppropriate Hybridization ConditionsDisease Gene IdentificationAllele-specific Hybridization BehaviorSynthetic OligonucleotidesGenetic AnalysisHematologyMolecular DiagnosticsBeta S AlleleMolecular Biological MethodDna ReplicationBiomolecular EngineeringAllelic VariantMolecular Diagnostic TechniquesGenetic EngineeringSynthetic BiologySickle CellS-globin AlleleMedicine
Two 19-base-long oligonucleotides were synthesized, one complementary to the normal human beta-globin gene (beta A) and one complementary to the sickle cell beta-globin gene (beta S). The nonadecanucleotides were radioactively labeled and used as probes in DNA hybridization. Under appropriate hybridization conditions, these probes can be used to distinguish the beta A gene from the beta S allele. The DNA from individuals homozygous for the normal beta-globin gene (beta A beta A) only hybridized with the beta A specific probe; the DNA from those homozygous for the sickle cell beta-globin gene (beta S beta S) only hybridized with the beta S specific probe. The DNA from heterozygous individuals (beta A beta S) hybridized with both probes. This allele-specific hybridization behavior of oligonucleotides provides a general method for diagnosis of any genetic disease which involves a point mutation in the DNA sequence of a single-copy gene.
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