A second-generation method of genotyping hepatitis C virus by the polymerase chain reaction with sense and antisense primers deduced from the core gene


Okamoto H., Kobata S., Tokita H., Inoue T., Woodfield G., Holland P., ...More

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGICAL METHODS, vol.57, no.1, pp.31-45, 1996 (SCI-Expanded) identifier identifier identifier

  • Publication Type: Article / Article
  • Volume: 57 Issue: 1
  • Publication Date: 1996
  • Doi Number: 10.1016/0166-0934(95)01960-x
  • Journal Name: JOURNAL OF VIROLOGICAL METHODS
  • Journal Indexes: Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED), Scopus
  • Page Numbers: pp.31-45
  • Keywords: hepatitis C viruses, genotype, polymerase chain reaction, hepatitis C, interferons, SEQUENCE, DISTINCT, SUBTYPES, REGION
  • Ankara University Affiliated: No

Abstract

A second-generation method of genotyping hepatitis C virus (HCV) was developed by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with sense as well as antisense primers deduced from the core gene. HCV RNA specimens extracted from sera were reverse-transcribed and amplified with universal primers in the first round of PCR to obtain fragments of 433 base pairs representing nucleotides 319-751. In the second round of PCR, portions of PCR products were amplified separately with sense and antisense primers specific for each of the five common genotypes prevailing across the world, i.e,, I/1a, II/1b, III/2a, IV/2b and V/3a. The specificity of the method was verified by a panel of 177 HCV isolates of various genotypes in the genetic groups 1-9. It allowed clear differentiation of genotype I/1a from II/1b which was not always accomplished by the previous method. When 501 sera from blood donors and hepatitis patients with HCV viremia from various countries were genotyped by the second-generation method, 478 (95.4%) were classified into the five genotypes. HCV RNA samples from 23 (4.6%) sera were not classifiable into any of the five common genotypes and, by sequence analysis, 22 were found to be of four genotypes in group 4 and one of genotype Ic in Simmond's classification.