Unbiased Whole-Genome Amplification Directly From Clinical Samples
Author(s) -
Seiyu Hosono,
A. Fawad Faruqi,
Frank B. Dean,
Yuefen Du,
Zhenyu Sun,
Xiaohong Wu,
Jing Du,
Stephen F. Kingsmore,
Michael D. Miller,
Roger S. Lasken
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
genome research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.556
H-Index - 297
eISSN - 1549-5469
pISSN - 1088-9051
DOI - 10.1101/gr.816903
Subject(s) - multiple displacement amplification , biology , dna nanoball sequencing , genomic dna , molecular inversion probe , genotyping , genetics , microsatellite , dna , buccal swab , genome , microbiology and biotechnology , polymerase chain reaction , genomic library , dna extraction , gene , genotype , allele , base sequence
Preparation of genomic DNA from clinical samples is a bottleneck in genotyping and DNA sequencing analysis and is frequently limited by the amount of specimen available. We use Multiple Displacement Amplification (MDA) to amplify the whole genome 10,000-fold directly from small amounts of whole blood, dried blood, buccal cells, cultured cells, and buffy coats specimens, generating large amounts of DNA for genetic testing. Genomic DNA was evenly amplified with complete coverage and consistent representation of all genes. All 47 loci analyzed from 44 individuals were represented in the amplified DNA at between 0.5- and 3.0-fold of the copy number in the starting genomic DNA template. A high-fidelity DNA polymerase ensures accurate representation of the DNA sequence. The amplified DNA was indistinguishable from the original genomic DNA template in 5 SNP and 10 microsatellite DNA assays on three different clinical sample types for 20 individuals. Amplification of genomic DNA directly from cells is highly reproducible, eliminates the need for DNA template purification, and allows genetic testing from small clinical samples. The low amplification bias of MDA represents a dramatic technical improvement in the ability to amplify a whole genome compared with older, PCR-based methods.
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