Publication | Open Access
Multiplex strand displacement amplification (SDA) and detection of DNA sequences from<i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i>and other mycobacteria
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Citations
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References
1994
Year
EngineeringStrand Displacement AmplificationInternal Amplification ControlDna AnalysisMolecular BiologyNucleic Acid Amplification TestDna SequencesNucleic Acid BiomarkersMultiplex SdaTuberculosis DiagnosticsOther MycobacteriaMolecular DiagnosticsPulmonary TuberculosisDna ReplicationTuberculosisMolecular MicrobiologyClinical MicrobiologyNucleic Acid BiochemistrySynthetic BiologyNucleic Acid AmplificationMicrobiologyMedicineGenome EditingDiagnostic Microbiology
Strand Displacement Amplification (SDA) is an isothermal, in vitro method of amplifying a DNA target sequence prior to detection [Walker et al (1992) Nucleic Acids Res., 20, 1691-1693]. Here we describe a multiplex form of SDA that allows two target sequences and an internal amplification control to be co-amplified by a single pair of primers after common priming sequences are spontaneously appended to the ends of target fragments. Multiplex SDA operates at a single temperature, under the same simple protocol previously developed for single-target SDA. We applied multiplex SDA to co-amplification of a target sequence (IS6110) that is specific to members of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis-complex and a target (16S ribosomal gene) that is common to most clinically relevant species of mycobacteria. Both targets are amplified 10(8)-fold during a 2 hour, single temperature incubation. The relative sensitivity of the system was evaluated across a number of clinically relevant mycobacteria and checked for crossreactivity against organisms that are closely related to mycobacteria.
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