Ying C, Van Pelt J, Yap SH, De Clercq E, Neyts J. Use of digoxigenin-labelled probes for the quantitation of HBV-DNA in antiviral drug evaluation.
J Virol Methods 1999;
81:155-8. [PMID:
10488773 DOI:
10.1016/s0166-0934(99)00070-1]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 9] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/16/2022]
Abstract
The use of digoxigenin-labelled probes was studied for quantitation of HBV-DNA during antiviral drug evaluation. Digoxigenin (dig)-labelled probes were generated either via incorporation of dig-dUTP in a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) or a random priming reaction. Using the PCR-labelled probe (delineating a 523 bp fragment in the core gene of the HBV) as little as 1 pg of immobilized HBV-DNA could be detected following an 8 h exposure of the hybridized membrane. A close correlation (r = 0.95) was found between the amount of HBV-DNA (range 2.5-200 pg) and the signal generated by the probe hybridized to its target DNA. By using a probe that was labelled with digoxigenin via random priming, the minimal quantity of immobilized HBV plasmid DNA that could be detected following an 8 h exposure was 4 pg, whereas a 32P-labelled probe, generated in parallel by random priming, allowed the detection of 16 pg of HBV plasmid DNA following a 4-day exposure. The PCR-generated digoxigenin-labelled probe proved to be useful for antiviral drug evaluation, i.e. to detect HBV-DNA in total cellular DNA from HBV-positive hepatoma cells (HepG2.2.15) that had either been treated with reference antiviral agents or left untreated. The 50% effective concentrations (EC50) that were calculated for inhibition of HBV-DNA production by lamivudine (3TC), penciclovir (PCV), lobucavir (LBV), adefovir (PMEA) and tenofovir (PMPA) were comparable to those reported in the literature. The use of digoxigenin-labelled probes thus appears to be a simple, convenient, rapid, reliable and non-radioactive method for use for anti-HBV screening. In addition, and in contrast to 32P-labelled probes, digoxigenin-labelled probes can be stored for >1 year without loss of specific activity, which makes these probes particularly attractive for large-scale antiviral drug evaluation purposes.
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