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Interlaboratory concordance of DNA sequence analysis to detect reverse transcriptase mutations in HIV-1 proviral DNA. ACTG Sequencing Working Group. AIDS Clinical Trials Group.

Authors :
Demeter LM
D'Aquila R
Weislow O
Lorenzo E
Erice A
Fitzgibbon J
Shafer R
Richman D
Howard TM
Zhao Y
Fisher E
Huang D
Mayers D
Sylvester S
Arens M
Sannerud K
Rasheed S
Johnson V
Kuritzkes D
Reichelderfer P
Japour A
Source :
Journal of virological methods [J Virol Methods] 1998 Nov; Vol. 75 (1), pp. 93-104.
Publication Year :
1998

Abstract

Thirteen laboratories evaluated the reproducibility of sequencing methods to detect drug resistance mutations in HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT). Blinded, cultured peripheral blood mononuclear cell pellets were distributed to each laboratory. Each laboratory used its preferred method for sequencing proviral DNA. Differences in protocols included: DNA purification; number of PCR amplifications; PCR product purification; sequence/location of PCR/sequencing primers; sequencing template; sequencing reaction label; sequencing polymerase; and use of manual versus automated methods to resolve sequencing reaction products. Five unknowns were evaluated. Thirteen laboratories submitted 39043 nucleotide assignments spanning codons 10-256 of HIV-1 RT. A consensus nucleotide assignment (defined as agreement among > or = 75% of laboratories) could be made in over 99% of nucleotide positions, and was more frequent in the three laboratory isolates. The overall rate of discrepant nucleotide assignments was 0.29%. A consensus nucleotide assignment could not be made at RT codon 41 in the clinical isolate tested. Clonal analysis revealed that this was due to the presence of a mixture of wild-type and mutant genotypes. These observations suggest that sequencing methodologies currently in use in ACTG laboratories to sequence HIV-1 RT yield highly concordant results for laboratory strains; however, more discrepancies among laboratories may occur when clinical isolates are tested.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0166-0934
Volume :
75
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of virological methods
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9820578
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0166-0934(98)00100-1