Abstract

The efficiency of a freeze-thaw method, a proteinase K/Tween 20 lysis method and a guanidinium isothiocyanate/silica beads method for DNA extraction from fixed and Papanicolaou-stained cells from the cervical cancer cell line Siha was measured by beta-globin polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The GTC/silica beads method, which appeared superior, revealed a human papillomavirus (HPV) general primer-mediated PCR sensitivity of 50-500 copies of HPV 16 per sample using dilutions of fixed and stained Siha cells. Application to archival cervical smears (n = 116) revealed that the yield and size of amplifiable DNA decreases with storage time. The longer the storage time, the more repetitions of the whole procedure, including the lysis step, were required to extract sufficient amplifiable DNA. In this way, an overall beta-globin PCR positivity for 98% of the smears was reached. Further analysis revealed that a maximum size of 200 bp could be amplified from smears stored for up to 9 years. The method was validated by demonstrating by PCR the same HPV types in archival smears and corresponding cervical biopsies of cervical cancer patients. In conclusion, the GTC/silica beads method appears suitable to process archival cervical smears for HPV detection by PCR. provided that stepwise adjustments are made until beta-globin PCR positivity is obtained and primers are chosen which amplify a maximum of about 200 bp.

Keywords

Polymerase chain reactionPapanicolaou stainDNA extractionMolecular biologyPrimer (cosmetics)Cervical cancerReal-time polymerase chain reactionProteinase KBiologySerial dilutionLysisVirologyDNAChemistryPathologyCancerMedicineGene

MeSH Terms

Base SequenceBeta-GlobulinsBiopsyDNADNAViralEndopeptidase KEvaluation Studies as TopicFeasibility StudiesFemaleFreezingGenotypeGuanidinesHumansIsothiocyanatesMolecular Sequence DataPapanicolaou TestPapillomaviridaePolymerase Chain ReactionPolysorbatesSerine EndopeptidasesSilicon DioxideStaining and LabelingTime FactorsTissue FixationUterine Cervical NeoplasmsVaginal Smears

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Publication Info

Year
1995
Type
article
Volume
72
Issue
2
Pages
412-417
Citations
135
Access
Closed

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Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

135
OpenAlex
4
Influential
109
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Cite This

A-M. de Roda Husman, PJF Snijders, HV Stel et al. (1995). Processing of long-stored archival cervical smears for human papillomavirus detection by the polymerase chain reaction. British Journal of Cancer , 72 (2) , 412-417. https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1995.347

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/bjc.1995.347
PMID
7543772
PMCID
PMC2033993

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%