Prospective testing for variants in the thiopurine S-methyltransferase (TPMT) is considered a key process in the development of thiopurine therapy. This testing is done to avoid toxicity and side effects in the management of diverse immunological and malignant conditions. Real-time fluorescent PCR techniques using duplex-crossed allele-specific primers in a single tube (DCAS-PCR) were developed in this study to genotype the common loss-of-function TPMT*3B c.460G > A (rs1800460) and TPMT*3C c.719A > G (rs1142345) usually occurring in individuals of Chinese ethnicity. In this method, several integrated strategies were used to completely eliminate the non-specific amplification that is commonly presented in traditional allele-specific (AS) PCR. These strategies include using AS-primers (ASP) that both are artificially mismatched in the penultimate positions and phosphorothioate modifications in the 5'-termini positions. In the assay, an AS-blocker was used, locus-specific TaqMan (LST) probes were used and we used at least two fragments were simultaneously amplified in a single tube which satisfy the thermodynamic characteristics of DNA polymerase to eliminate non-specific amplification. In a group of 200 unselected subjects, the results showed that 8 samples were heterozygous of TPMT*3C, and all samples possessed wild-type TPMT*3B. There was no non-specific amplification, and the genotypes were 100% consistent with Sanger sequencing.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ab.2019.03.019DOI Listing

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