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1.
J Mol Diagn ; 21(4): 580-592, 2019 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31026601

ABSTRACT

A point-of-care HIV-1 genotypic resistance assay that could be performed during a clinic visit would enable care providers to make informed treatment decisions for patients starting therapy or experiencing virologic failure on therapy. The main challenge for such an assay is the genetic variability at and surrounding each drug-resistance mutation (DRM). We analyzed a database of diverse global HIV sequences and used thermodynamic simulations to design an array of surface-bound oligonucleotide probe sets with each set sharing distinct 5' and 3' flanking sequences but having different centrally located nucleotides complementary to six codons at HIV-1 DRM reverse transcriptase position 103: AAA, AAC, AAG, AAT, AGA, and AGC. We then performed in vitro experiments using 80-mer oligonucleotides and PCR-amplified DNA from clinical plasma HIV-1 samples and culture supernatants that contained subtype A, B, C, D, CRF01_AE, and CRF02_AG viruses. Multiplexed solid-phase melt curve analysis discriminated perfectly among each of the six reported reverse transcriptase position 103 codons in both 80-mers and clinical samples. The sensitivity and specificity for detecting targets that contained AAC mixed with targets that contained AAA were >98% when AAC was present at a proportion of ≥10%. Multiplexed solid-phase melt curve analysis is a promising approach for developing point-of-care assays to distinguish between different codons in genetically variable regions such as those surrounding HIV-1 DRMs.


Subject(s)
Drug Resistance, Viral , HIV Infections/virology , HIV-1/drug effects , HIV-1/genetics , Point-of-Care Testing , Databases, Genetic , Genotype , HIV Infections/diagnosis , HIV Infections/drug therapy , Humans , Mutation , RNA, Viral
2.
Nat Biotechnol ; 36(8): 738-745, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30010676

ABSTRACT

The emergence of pathogens resistant to existing antimicrobial drugs is a growing worldwide health crisis that threatens a return to the pre-antibiotic era. To decrease the overuse of antibiotics, molecular diagnostics systems are needed that can rapidly identify pathogens in a clinical sample and determine the presence of mutations that confer drug resistance at the point of care. We developed a fully integrated, miniaturized semiconductor biochip and closed-tube detection chemistry that performs multiplex nucleic acid amplification and sequence analysis. The approach had a high dynamic range of quantification of microbial load and was able to perform comprehensive mutation analysis on up to 1,000 sequences or strands simultaneously in <2 h. We detected and quantified multiple DNA and RNA respiratory viruses in clinical samples with complete concordance to a commercially available test. We also identified 54 drug-resistance-associated mutations that were present in six genes of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, all of which were confirmed by next-generation sequencing.


Subject(s)
DNA Viruses/drug effects , Genotype , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/drug effects , RNA Viruses/drug effects , Semiconductors , Colony Count, Microbial , DNA Probes , DNA Viruses/genetics , DNA Viruses/isolation & purification , DNA, Viral/analysis , Drug Resistance, Bacterial/genetics , Drug Resistance, Viral/genetics , Feasibility Studies , Genome, Bacterial , Humans , Miniaturization , Mutation , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/genetics , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/isolation & purification , Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques , RNA Viruses/genetics , RNA Viruses/isolation & purification , RNA, Viral/analysis
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