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Review
. 2000 Sep-Oct;10(5):321-35.
doi: 10.1002/1099-1654(200009/10)10:5<321::aid-rmv288>3.0.co;2-x.

Viral genome characterisation by the heteroduplex mobility and heteroduplex tracking assays

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Review

Viral genome characterisation by the heteroduplex mobility and heteroduplex tracking assays

K L Barlow et al. Rev Med Virol. 2000 Sep-Oct.

Abstract

The heteroduplex mobility assay (HMA) is a means of comparing two PCR amplicons or, in the variation known as the heteroduplex tracking assay (HTA), a means of estimating the quasispecies diversity of a viral genome. Heteroduplex assays have many applications including subtyping viral genomes, screening for low frequency variants in a population, scanning the relative genetic diversity across a genome and screening for recombinant clones. They can be used to detect dual infections, superinfections, contaminated blood products and laboratory contaminations. PCR amplicons of about 65% sequence similarity or greater will form heteroduplexes under appropriate conditions, and phylogenetic trees can be drawn from heteroduplex mobility data. While homoduplexes indicate more than 98% similarity between two DNA sequences, heteroduplexes indicate at least seven mismatches in a 500-bp amplicon, or a three-base pair gap in 1000-bp. Minority variants comprising 1% to 5% of the genome population can be detected and quantified by HTA. Thus far, heteroduplex assays have been described for HIV and other lentiviruses, hepatitis C and G viruses, Norwalk-like viruses, influenza, measles and poliovirus. They could be applied to a wide range of other viral species.

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