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Copyright ©2014 Baishideng Publishing Group Inc.
World J Hepatol. Dec 27, 2014; 6(12): 916-922
Published online Dec 27, 2014. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v6.i12.916
Table 1 Characters of some isothermal amplification techniques[51]
NASBALAMPSDARCAHDARPA
TemplateDNA, RNADNA1DNA1DNA1DNA1DNA1
No. of primers24-64122
No. of enzymes312222
Temperature (°C)4160-6537376530-42
Reaction duration (min)90-12060-901206075-9020
Denaturation stepYNYNNN
Inhibition toleranceNYNNYY
Product detectionGE, RTGE, RT, TEGE, RTGEGE, RTRT
MultiplexYNYNYY
Point-of-careYYYNYY
Table 2 Advantages/disadvantages of some isothermal amplification methods
TechniqueAdvantagesDisadvantages
NASBASpecifically designed to detect RNA and in turn RNA virusesDenaturation step
Power saving (41 °C)Less efficient in Amplifying RNA targets out of the range 120-250 bp
LAMPHighly specific (utilizes 4-6 primers spanning 6-8 distinct sequences)Primer design is complex
Tolerance to biological substancesUnable to perform multiplex amplification
Could be detected by a cheap turbidity-meter
SDAPower saving (37 °C)Sample prep. needed
Nuclease selection is complex
Inefficient in long target sequences
RCAPower saving (37 °C)Primer is complex
Specific enough to allow SNP analysisRNA amplification is complex
Works only with a circular nucleic acid template
HDASimple primer designExpensive enzymes
Robust to biological substances
No initial heating step
RPAPower saving (37 °C)
Simple primer design
Extremely quick (20 min)
No initial heating step
Robust to biological substances