Ellett Justin D, Evans Zachary P, Zhang Guojing, Chavin Kenneth D, Spyropoulos Demetri D
Department of Surgery, Division of Transplant, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, USA.
Obesity (Silver Spring). 2009 Feb;17(2):402-4. doi: 10.1038/oby.2008.443. Epub 2008 Oct 23.
With increasing incidence of obesity, there is greater demand for suitable research and therapeutic models. The ob/ob mouse model develops obesity by 5 weeks of age. Previously, a method using DNA purification, PCR, and restriction digestion of products was devised to identify mice bearing the ob allele. Here, we describe a direct PCR method that requires no DNA purification. Wild-type and ob-specific primers are used under the same conditions in two separate and simultaneously run three-primer PCRs. Standard PCR using the wild-type primer mix produces 191 bp and 104 bp bands in +/+ and ob/+ and only the control 191 bp band in ob/ob animals. The ob-specific primer reaction produces 191 bp and 123 bp bands in ob/+ and ob/ob and only the control 191 bp band in +/+ animals. Phenotypic weight gain in offspring of heterozygous intercrosses was used to validate genotypes. This primer-specific PCR method allows simultaneous identification of +/+, ob/+, and ob/ob genotypes prior to breeding age to facilitate breeding and research studies in an important model of clinical obesity.