Abstract

A DNA hybridization assay for the detection of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) DNA was developed using random hexanucleotide-primed 32P-labelled Hind III restriction fragments of HCMV DNA as probes, and compared with a DNA hybridization assay using probes labelled with 32P by nick translation. Nick-translated probes were shown to be able to detect between 1 and 10 pg of homologous DNA or the DNA of 10–50 HCMV-infected fibroblasts. Random hexanucleotide-primed DNA probes lowered these detection limits to 0·1–0·5 pg of homologous DNA or one to five HCMV-infected fibroblasts. An increase in the autoradiographic exposure time from 18h to 4 days increased the level of detection for homologous DNA or HCMV-infected fibroblast DNA by approximately five-fold. Preliminary screening of 35 urine samples by DNA hybridization using a random hexanucleotide-primed probe correctly identified three samples positive by virus isolation in tissue culture or immediate-early nuclear antigen detection and 29 of 32 samples negative by tissue culture.

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