Guo Dong-Chuan, Milewicz Dianna M
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas - Houston Medical School, MSB 1.410, 6431 Fannin, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Biotechnol Lett. 2003 Dec;25(24):2079-83. doi: 10.1023/b:bile.0000007075.24434.5e.
Detection of human DNA polymorphisms using high throughput methods often relies on generating a labeled DNA fraament which is generated by PCR using sequence-specific primers with an end labeled tag to detect a variant. The disadvantage of the synthesis of an end-labeled, sequence-specific primer to assay each DNA variant lies in the costs and time consume. In this report, we have demonstrated a methodology that can generate labeled DNA fragments using a labeled universal primer instead of requiring sequence-specific primers for each DNA variant.