Publication | Closed Access
Identification of ABO alleles on forensic-type specimens using rapid-ABO genotyping.
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Citations
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References
1995
Year
Genetic TestingGeneticsGenetic EpidemiologyDna AnalysisPathologyGenomicsGenetic AnalysisGenotype-phenotype AssociationBioanalysisBiostatisticsClinical ChemistryPublic HealthLaboratory MedicineMolecular DiagnosticsAbo AllelesAbo TypesStatistical GeneticsGenetic VariationAbo Blood TypesPopulation GeneticsGorilla DnaAllelic VariantEvolutionary BiologyForensic IdentificationMedicine
Historically, forensic and clinical laboratories utilize serological techniques to identify ABO blood types. These techniques rely on the detection of ABO-associated proteins and are sensitive with very accurate results. This laboratory has simplified the identification of ABO types by taking advantage of previously reported ABO DNA sequence differences. The Rapid-ABO technique involves a two-step process: (i) amplification of DNA samples using primer sets specific for the ABO alleles and (ii) electrophoresis and visualization of amplified ABO fragments on a 3% MetaPhor agarose gel. The major advantage of the Rapid-ABO technique is the identification of ABO genotypes compared to serological tests for ABO phenotypes. This two-step process identifies six possible ABO genotypes including AB, AA, BB, AO, BO and OO. The Rapid-ABO protocol works well with DNA extracted organically or using Chelex 100. Results can be obtained in less than a day utilizing 2 ng of DNA in the amplification reaction. Analysis of 23 animal species shows the Rapid-ABO primers amplify ABO alleles from only human, chimpanzee and gorilla DNA.
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