Publication | Closed Access
The Development and Evaluation of a Probe Hybridization Method for Subtyping HIV Type 1 Infection in Uganda
11
Citations
11
References
1998
Year
Hybridization MethodMedicineGeneticsHuman RetrovirusGenetic EpidemiologyDna AnalysisNucleic Acid Amplification TestVirologyResistance Mutation (Virology)Dna Probe HybridizationNucleic Acid AmplificationGenomicsHivMolecular DiagnosticsHiv Type 1Probe Hybridization MethodProbe Hybridization
We developed a method for large-scale screening of HIV-1 genotypic variation based on DNA probe hybridization. Nested PCR amplifications were performed to generate fragments in the env C2-V3 region and also in the gp41 region, which encompasses the immunodominant domain. The proviral DNA sequences were derived from 68 samples and phylogenetically analyzed. For comparison, the C2-V3 fragment was used in DNA probe hybridization to rapidly determine the infecting HIV subtype. The hybridizing probes were designed on the basis of the two most prevalent subtypes in Uganda, A and D. The results were compared to evaluate the feasibility of using this hybridization method for large-scale genotypic screening. Sequence analysis of the 68 amplified PCR fragments showed that 39 were subtype A and 29 were subtype D. The results of DNA hybridization to the amplified products with A and D subtype-specific probes were more than 90% concordant with the subtypes determined by sequence analysis. Our findings suggest that probe hybridization with subtype-specific probes is effective for large-scale screening of HIV-infected populations. Application of this method will significantly reduce the time needed for large, population-based investigations.
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