4.7 Article

Enhanced asymmetric blocked qPCR method for affordable detection of point mutations in KRAS oncogene

Journal

ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 413, Issue 11, Pages 2961-2969

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00216-021-03229-3

Keywords

Bioanalytical methods; Allele-selective qPCR; KRAS oncogene; Mutation genotyping; DNA variant detection

Funding

  1. Generalitat Valenciana (GVA-FPI-2017 PhD grant)
  2. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO) [CTQ2016-75749-R]
  3. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF)

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An accurate genetic diagnostic is crucial for patient management and healthcare systems. The development of methods to discriminate patients with genetic variations present in tumor cells at low concentrations poses a scientific challenge. EAB-qPCR is a promising method that can accurately detect genetic mutations with high sensitivity and reproducibility, making it suitable for routine clinical use.
An accurate genetic diagnostic is key for adequate patient management and the suitability of healthcare systems. The scientific challenge lies in developing methods to discriminate those patients with certain genetic variations present in tumor cells at low concentrations. We report a method called enhanced asymmetric blocked qPCR (EAB-qPCR) that promotes the blocker annealing against the primer-template hybrid controlling thermal cycling and reaction conditions with nonmodified oligonucleotides. Real-time fluorescent amplification curves of wild-type alleles were delayed by about eight cycles for EAB-qPCR, compared to conventional blocked qPCR approaches. This method reduced the amplification of native DNA variants (blocking percentage 99.7%) and enabled the effective enrichment of low-level DNA mutations. Excellent performance was estimated for the detection of mutated alleles in sensitivity (up to 0.5% mutant/total DNA) and reproducibility terms, with a relative standard deviation below 2.8%. The method was successfully applied to the mutational analysis of metastatic colorectal carcinoma from biopsied tissues. The determined single-nucleotide mutations in the KRAS oncogene (codon 12-13) totally agreed with those obtained from next-generation sequencing. EAB-qPCR is an accurate cheap method and can be easily incorporated into daily routine to detect mutant alleles. Hence, these features are especially interesting to facilitate the diagnosis and prognosis of several clinical diseases.

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