Abstract
In many cases, only a minute amount of partially degraded genomic DNA can be extracted from archived clinical samples. Diverse whole-genome amplification methods are applied to provide sufficient amount of DNA for comparative genome hybridization, single-nucleotide polymorphism, and microsatellite analyses. In these applications, the reliability of the amplification techniques is particularly important. In PCR-based approaches, the plateau effect can seriously alter the original relative copy number of certain chromosomal regions. To eliminate this distorting effect, we improved the standard degenerate oligonucleotide-primed PCR (DOP-PCR) technique by following the amplification status with quantitative real-time PCR (QRT-PCR). With real-time detection of the products, we could eliminate DNA overamplification. Probes were prepared from 10 different tumor samples: primary and metastatic melanoma tissues, epidermoid and bronchioloalveolar lung carcinomas, 2 renal cell carcinomas, 2 colorectal carcinomas, and a Conn and Cushing adenoma. Probes were generated by using nonamplified and amplified genomic DNA with DOP-PCR and DOP-PCR combined with QRT-PCR. To demonstrate the reliability of the QRT-PCR based amplification protocol, altogether 152 relative copy number changes of 44 regions were determined. There was 85.6% concordance in copy number alterations between the QRT-PCR protocol and the nonamplified samples, whereas this value was only 63.8% for the traditional DOP-PCR. Our results demonstrate that our protocol preserves the original copy number of different chromosomal regions in amplified genomic DNA than standard DOP-PCR techniques more accurately.
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