Ml. Gulley et N. Raabtraub, DETECTION OF EPSTEIN-BARR-VIRUS IN HUMAN TISSUES BY MOLECULAR-GENETICTECHNIQUES, Archives of pathology and laboratory medicine, 117(11), 1993, pp. 1115-1120
Citations number
58
Categorie Soggetti
Pathology,"Medical Laboratory Technology","Medicine, Research & Experimental
In the past few years, there has been an explosion of new data on the
association of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) with human disease. Many of th
ese discoveries have come as a direct result of the application of DNA
technology. The nucleic acid hybridization techniques most commonly u
sed to detect EBV in human tissues include Southern blot analysis, in
situ hybridization to viral DNA or RNA, and polymerase chain reaction.
An advantage of Southern blotting is the ability to distinguish laten
t from infectious EBV and to determine the clonality of infected tumor
s with respect to the structure of the viral terminal repeat sequences
. In situ hybridization has the advantage of precise localization of t
he virus in infected tissues or tumors. Polymerase chain reaction is e
xquisitely sensitive in detecting viral DNA, perhaps too sensitive for
disease-specific purposes given the ubiquitous nature of EBV. Each of
these molecular genetic methods of EBV analysis is currently used in
research laboratories, while some methods have found their way into ro
utine diagnostic pathology because they are faster, more sensitive, or
more informative than previous assays.