Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9279366 | Journal of Virological Methods | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Forty-nine samples with known C2V3 sequences were used for the evaluation of an env-based molecular beacon assay to distinguish between the two genetic subclusters C and Câ² which characterize the HIV-1 epidemic in Ethiopia. Two subcluster C and two subcluster Câ² beacons targeting two different loci in the C2V3 region were developed. Using a three beacon-based (2C and 1Câ²Â = C prime), isothermal amplification assay, concordance with DNA sequencing was achieved for 43 (87.8%) samples. Sensitivity was 81.8% and specificity 97.4% for subcluster C beacons. For the subcluster Câ² beacon, a sensitivity of 97% and a specificity of 87.5% was achieved. Five samples were ambiguous by sequencing of which two samples were subcluster Câ² by the beacon assay and one subcluster C. Two of the samples remained ambiguous with different beacon-pair combinations as well. From samples with a clear C or Câ² phylogeny by sequencing, three were undetected by the first-line beacon genotyping assay. Genotype ambiguity was resolved in the three samples using beacon pair combinations restricted to each targeted locus. The beacons were evaluated further in a panel including all HIV-1 subtypes. Four of five subtype C isolates were identified correctly, and no cross-reactivity was observed with other subtypes.
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Authors
Workenesh Ayele, Michel P. de Baar, Jaap Goudsmit, Aletta Kliphuis, Tesfaye Tilahun, Wendelien Dorigo-Zetsma, Dawit Wolday, Almaz Abebe, Yohannes Mengistu, Georgios Pollakis,