BioTechniques (Mar 2001)

Flow Cytometric Platform for High-Throughput Single Nucleotide Polymorphism Analysis

  • J.D. Taylor,
  • D. Briley,
  • Q. Nguyen,
  • K. Long,
  • M.A. Iannone,
  • M.-S. Li,
  • F. Ye,
  • A. Afshari,
  • E. Lai,
  • M. Wagner,
  • J. Chen,
  • M.P. Weiner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2144/01303dd04
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 3
pp. 661 – 669

Abstract

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We have developed a rapid, cost-effective, high-throughput readout for single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotyping using flow cytometric analysis performed on a Luminex™ 100 flow cytometer. This robust technique employs a PCR-derived target DNA containing the SNP, a synthetic SNP-complementary ZipCode-bearing capture probe, a fluorescent reporter molecule, and a thermophilic DNA polymerase. An array of fluorescent microspheres, covalently coupled with complementary ZipCode sequences (cZipCodes), was hybridized to the reaction products and sequestered them for flow cytometric analysis. The single base chain extension (SBCE) reaction was used to assay 20 multiplexed SNPs for 633 patients in 96-well format. Comparison of the microsphere-based SBCE assay results to gel-based oligonucleotide ligation assay (OLA) results showed 99.3% agreement in genotype assignments. Substitution of direct-labeled R6G dideoxynucleotide with indirect-labeled phycoerythrin dideoxynucleotide enhanced signal five- to tenfold while maintaining low noise levels. A new assay based on allele-specific primer extension (ASPE) was validated on a set of 15 multiplexed SNPs for 96 patients. ASPE offers both the advantage of streamlining the SNP analysis protocol and the ability to perform multiplex SNP analysis on any mixture of allelic variants.