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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, March 2003, p. 1274-1276, Vol. 41, No. 3
0095-1137/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.41.3.1274-1276.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Biobanque de Picardie, 80000 Amiens, France
Received 25 July 2002/ Returned for modification 12 October 2002/ Accepted 12 December 2002
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The overlap extension technique can be used to construct an ICD with the same primer binding sequences as the target DNA (6). However, there is a difference in size between the ICD and the natural amplification products. Using the same primers is an advantage, because multiple sets of primers might interfere with the amplification of one or both of the target genes, due to differences in the primer sequences, sizes and internal sequences of the amplified products, and the relative amounts of the two targets (7).
The strategy for constructing ICDs is illustrated in Fig. 1. Primer CT1 (5'-TAGTAACTGCCACTTCATCA-3') and primer CT2 (5'-biotin-TTCCCCTTGTAATTCGTTGC-3') are flanking primers that amplify a 201-bp PCR product from C. trachomatis plasmid orf2 DNA (5). The primers ICT1 (5'-AATGCGCAAGCCTGATGTCAGTCAACTTCTGATTTTCAAG-3') and ICT2 (5'-ATCAGGCTTGCGCATTGCTAGCTACATTACCATGCATTAG-3') are internal primers. The nucleotides shown in italics are derived from the C. trachomatis sequence. The underlined nucleotides at the 5' ends are complementary to each other. The 3' ends of the ICT1 and ICT2 primers bind close to the two ends of the C. trachomatis amplicon. PCR on C. trachomatis genomic DNA was used to generate two smaller DNA products. A 50-bp DNA fragment and a 59-bp DNA fragment were produced with primers CT1 and ICT1 and primers ICT2 and CT2, respectively. The two DNA fragments have overlapping ends due to the complementary sequences at the 5' ends of primers ICT1 and ICT2 (Fig. 1). These two DNA fragments were used in an additional PCR with the CT1 and CT2 primers. In this reaction, one strand from each fragment contained the overlap sequence and could therefore serve as a primer for the other. Extension of the overlap by Taq polymerase yielded a new 125-bp PCR product, 76 bp shorter than the 201-bp C. trachomatis amplicon produced directly with CT1 and CT2, as visualized on an ethidium bromide-stained agarose gel (data not shown).
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FIG. 1. Construction of internal control DNA by overlap extension. CT1 and CT2 are the primers used for C. trachomatis PCR amplification. ICT1 and ICT2 are designed to bind close to CT1 and CT2. The open boxes at the 5' ends of the primers indicate complementary sequences.
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We designed a C. trachomatis-specific 5'-digoxigenin (DIG)-labeled probe (5'-GCTCAAAATGGGATGG-3'), corresponding to the central region of the C. trachomatis amplicon, which is not contained in the ICD. An ICD-specific 5'-DIG-labeled internal control (IC) probe (5' ATCAGGCTTGCGCATT 3'), corresponding to the complementary sequences of the ICT1 and ICT2 primers not present in the C. trachomatis target sequence, was also designed. Unique probe binding regions differentiate amplified ICD from target DNA. The ICD described in this study has the same primer binding sequences and the same internal sequence base composition as the C. trachomatis target DNA. Therefore, its amplification should not affect the efficiency of target DNA amplification. After each amplification reaction, the CT probe and the IC probe were added to separate microplate wells to detect amplified target DNA and amplified ICD, respectively, in a colorimetric enzyme immunoassay. Each PCR product was diluted 1/10 in 1x SSC (0.15 M NaCl plus 0.15 M sodium citrate)-0.5% Tween 20 in streptavidin-coated microplate wells, washed with 100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5)-150 mM NaCl, denatured with 0.1 N NaOH, hybridized to appropriate DIG-labeled probes (CT probe and IC probe) at a concentration of 10 pmol/ml in Tris-buffered saline buffer, and detected with an alkaline phosphatase-conjugated anti-DIG antibody/pNPP (paranitrophenyl phosphate) substrate. Samples were considered positive if they gave an A405 of
0.05.
As little as one copy of ICD could be detected in a PCR. Various amounts of ICD were incorporated in individual PCR mixtures containing 5 pg of C. trachomatis DNA (equivalent of three elementary bodies [EB]). The addition of 1, 10, or 100 ICD copies did not affect the target DNA signal. Competition with C. trachomatis DNA amplification was observed only at higher ICD copy concentrations. However, detection of the ICD was negatively correlated with C. trachomatis EB copy number in urine, suggesting competitive inhibition of ICD amplification in the presence of large numbers of EB (Table 1). Therefore, competition cannot cause a false-negative result, because an excess of EB will result in a positive signal for the primary C. trachomatis target, even in the absence of a positive signal for the ICD target. False-positive results due to reagent contamination were ruled out by the systematic use of two negative controls: one "no DNA" negative control, which reflects the total reagent handled, and one negative sample control, which had gone through all the sample preparation steps.
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TABLE 1. A405 of PCR amplification products in the colorimetric enzyme immunoassaya
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Our results suggest that the use of an ICD is absolutely necessary if urine samples are not subjected to a DNA extraction procedure before amplification, as 23% of urine samples prepared in this way contained substances that inhibited the PCR. However, inhibitory substances are efficiently eliminated by DNA extraction (0% PCR inhibition).
Furthermore, very small amounts of C. trachomatis target DNA (3 to 30 EB) were efficiently amplified only after DNA extraction (Table 1). Such small amounts of C. trachomatis target DNA were generally not amplified in the absence of DNA extraction, even if the ICD was efficiently amplified. PCR inhibitors, probably still present after detergent lysis treatment, decrease amplification efficiency, thereby reducing the amount of PCR products generated and decreasing the signal generated from each amplification product. Once the urine sample had been subjected to DNA extraction, the inclusion of 102 copies of ICD in the PCR mixture allowed the efficient amplification of as little DNA as the equivalent of three C. trachomatis EB (Table 1). Our results suggest that the sensitivity of the PCR assay depends on the sample preparation procedure; the inclusion of the ICD provides further assurance that clinical specimens are successfully amplified and detected. We used this ICD to demonstrate that the frequency of inhibition in the PCR test ranged from 0% if DNA extraction was performed before amplification to 23% if it was not performed before amplification. Thus, the incorporation of an ICD into PCR-based tests may be superfluous or necessary depending on the sample preparation procedure used.
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