Medicine

Permanent URI for this communityhttp://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/12

This repository contains the published and unpublished research of the Faculty of Medicine by the staff members of the faculty

Browse

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Item
    Cloning and characterization of a repetitive DNA sequence specific for Wuchereria bancrofti
    (American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1994) Siridewa, K.; Karunanayake, E.H.; Chandrasekharan, N.V.; Abeyewickreme, W.; Franzen, L.; Aslund, L.; Pettersson, U.
    A genomic library constructed in a bacteriophage lambda replacement vector (EMBL3) with Wuchereria bancrofti DNA partially digested with Sau 3A I was screened with 32P-labeled W. bancrofti total DNA, and a strongly reactive recombinant, EMBL3Wb34, was isolated. This clone contained an approximately 16-kb insert that showed some cross-hybridization with Brugia malayi and B. pahangi DNA. However, a 969-bp subclone from EMBL3Wb34, designated pWb12, hybridized only with W. bancrofti DNA and was able to detect as little as 300 pg. Furthermore, pWb12 could detect DNA from a single infective larva or one microfilaria. It has a moderate copy number (450-700) and appears to be interspersed within the parasite genome. The nucleotide sequence contains 66% A+T and 34% G+C and shows no notable internal repeats.
  • Item
    Dirofilaria repens: Cloning and Characterization of a Repeated DNA Sequence for the Diagnosis of Dirofilariasis in Dogs, Canis familiaris
    (Academic Press, 1994) Chandrasekharan, N.V.; Karunanayake, E.H.; Franzen, L.; Abeyewickreme, W.; Pettersson, U.
    A highly repetitive DNA element from the genome of the filarial nematode Dirofilaria repens has been cloned and sequenced. The 176-base pair repeating units are arranged in direct tandem and are clustered in the parasite genome. All repeats appear to belong to a single family although some elements have diverged significantly. The repeats are present in about 15,000 copies and constitute approximately 3.0% of the parasite genome. The cloned repetitive sequence hybridized only to D. repens DNA and was sensitive enough to detect 250 to 500 pg of D. repens DNA, a single microfilariae in infected blood samples, and a single third stage larvae in mosquitoes. The high specificity and sensitivity of the cloned fragment makes it ideal as a diagnostic probe for detecting D. repens in both the host and the vector.
All items in this Institutional Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated. No item in the repository may be reproduced for commercial or resale purposes.