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Virology

Normalized Quantification of Human Cytomegalovirus DNA by Competitive Real-Time PCR on the LightCycler Instrument

Markus Stöcher, Jörg Berg
Markus Stöcher
Institute of Laboratory Medicine, General Hospital Linz, A-4020 Linz, Austria
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Jörg Berg
Institute of Laboratory Medicine, General Hospital Linz, A-4020 Linz, Austria
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  • For correspondence: joerg.berg@akh.linz.at
DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.12.4547-4553.2002
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  • FIG. 1.
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    FIG. 1.

    Schematic sketch of the CMV-specific IC (A) and CMV-specific PCR product (B). The IC DNA fragment consists of the CMV-specific primer sequences flanking the 5′ and 3′ termini of the neo gene sequence, which was used as heterologous DNA. IC DNA and CMV-specific DNA were amplified with the same set of primers. The sizes of the IC-specific and CMV-specific PCR products were 325 and 278 bp, respectively. The 3′ FRET hybridization probe specific for neo was labeled with LC-Red 640 and detected on channel F2 of the LightCycler instrument, whereas the 3′ FRET hybridization probe specific for CMV was labeled with LC-Red 705 and detected on channel F3.

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    FIG. 2.

    Real-time fluorescence plot of the CMV-specific amplification (A) and the IC-specific amplification (B). One hundred copies of the IC and the indicated number of copies of CMV DNA were applied to each capillary. Note in panel B that with increasing amounts of CMV DNA, the IC amplification was competitively inhibited.

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    FIG. 3.

    Normalized quantification of CMV reference standard DNA. Ten, 20, 100, 200, and 1,000 copies of CMV reference standard DNA per capillary (n = 8) were assessed by NQC-LC-PCR and conventional LightCycler PCR. (A) CMV copies measured by NQC-LC-PCR were plotted against applied CMV copies (r = 0.972; P < 0.001; 95% CI, 0.946 to 0.985). (B) CMV copies measured by NQC-LC-PCR were plotted against CMV copies measured by conventional LightCycler PCR (r = 0.971; P < 0.001; 95% CI, 0.945 to 0.984; linear regression analysis, y = 1.02x − 0.05). Note that none of the samples was inhibited.

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    FIG. 4.

    Normalized quantification of CMV DNA in PCR-inhibited samples by NQC-LC-PCR. Approximately 100 copies of CMV DNA and 100 copies of IC DNA were amplified in the presence of hemoglobin added in graded amounts. Quantification was performed in normalized fashion (open squares) and by the conventional real-time LightCycler method (closed squares). Quantified CMV copies in samples with hemoglobin were compared with quantified CMV copies in samples without hemoglobin by Student's t test. Symbols marked with an asterisk indicate significantly different CMV copy numbers (P < 0.005) between samples with and without hemoglobin; symbols without an asterisk indicate that results were not significantly different (P > 0.05).

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    FIG. 5.

    Correlation between quantitative CMV DNA values from clinical samples analyzed by NQC-LC-PCR assay and by conventional LightCycler assay. The scatter diagram and the regression line show the relation of mean numbers of CMV DNA copies (squares) for 28 CMV-positive clinical samples assessed by both methods (r = 0.973; P < 0.001; 95% CI, 0.943 to 0.987; linear regression analysis, y = 1.07x − 0.18). The NQC-LC-PCR assay used a single calibrator sample for normalized quantification. For the conventional LightCycler assay, a serial dilution of CMV reference standard DNA was used as the external standard. In the NQC-LC-PCR, the results for four samples exceeded the range of quantification. These samples were diluted 1:10 and retested (triangles). Note that none of the samples appeared to be inhibited.

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Normalized Quantification of Human Cytomegalovirus DNA by Competitive Real-Time PCR on the LightCycler Instrument
Markus Stöcher, Jörg Berg
Journal of Clinical Microbiology Dec 2002, 40 (12) 4547-4553; DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.12.4547-4553.2002

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Normalized Quantification of Human Cytomegalovirus DNA by Competitive Real-Time PCR on the LightCycler Instrument
Markus Stöcher, Jörg Berg
Journal of Clinical Microbiology Dec 2002, 40 (12) 4547-4553; DOI: 10.1128/JCM.40.12.4547-4553.2002
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KEYWORDS

cytomegalovirus
DNA, Viral
polymerase chain reaction

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