Patent application title: ASSAYING OVARIAN CYST FLUID
Inventors:
Yuxuan Wang (Baltimore, MD, US)
Bert Vogelstein (Baltimore, MD, US)
Kenneth W. Kinzler (Baltimore, MD, US)
Kenneth W. Kinzler (Baltimore, MD, US)
Luis Diaz (Ellicot City, MD, US)
Luis Diaz (Ellicot City, MD, US)
Nickolas Papadopoulos (Towson, MD, US)
Nickolas Papadopoulos (Towson, MD, US)
Karin Sundfeldt (Gothenburg, SE)
Bjorg Kristjansdottir (Gothenburg, SE)
IPC8 Class: AC12Q16886FI
USPC Class:
Class name:
Publication date: 2022-06-30
Patent application number: 20220205048
Abstract:
A diagnostic test for ovarian cysts is based on the detection of
mutations characteristic of the most common neoplasms giving rise to
these lesions. With this test, tumor-specific mutations were detected in
the cyst fluids of 19 of 24 (79%) borderline tumors and 28 of 31 (90%)
malignant ovarian cancers. In contrast, we detected no mutations in the
cyst fluids from 10 non-neoplastic cysts and 12 benign tumors. When
categorized by the need for exploratory surgery (i.e., presence of a
borderline tumor or malignant cancer), the sensitivity of this test was
85% and the specificity was 100%. These tests could inform the diagnosis
of ovarian cysts and improve the clinical management of the large number
of women with these lesions.Claims:
1-34. (canceled)
35. A method, comprising: testing ovarian cyst fluid for a mutation in at least one gene mutated in a type II ovarian neoplasm, wherein said at least one gene comprises TP53, wherein the step of testing employs a step of adding a unique identifier (UID) to a plurality of TP53 template DNA molecules in the ovarian cyst fluid, and wherein the method has a sensitivity level of at least 70%.
36. The method of claim 35, wherein said at least one gene further comprises KRAS.
37. The method of claim 35, wherein the step of testing employs TP53-specific reagents.
38. The method of claim 35, wherein the step of testing employs TP53 mutation-specific reagents.
39. The method of claim 35, wherein the testing is performed on the ovarian cyst fluid and on a sample selected from the group consisting of cyst wall and normal, non-ovarian tissue.
40. The method of claim 35, wherein the ovarian cyst fluid is obtained by needle aspiration of an ovarian cyst.
41. The method of claim 35, wherein the ovarian cyst fluid is obtained prior to any surgical removal of the ovarian cyst.
42. The method of claim 35, wherein the ovarian cyst fluid is obtained after surgical removal of the ovarian cyst and recurrence of the ovarian cyst.
43. The method of claim 35, wherein a copy number variation, a loss of heterozygosity, or both, is determined for said at least one gene.
44. The method of claim 35, wherein a point mutation, a rearrangement, a frameshift, or combinations thereof, is determined for said at least one gene.
45. The method of claim 35, wherein the method has a sensitivity level of at least 85%.
46. The method of claim 35, wherein the method has a specificity level of at least 90%.
47. The method of claim 35, wherein the ovarian neoplasm needs surgery.
Description:
[0001] This application is a Continuation of U.S. application Ser. No.
15/749,887, filed Feb. 2, 2018, which is a National Stage application
under 35 U.S.C. .sctn. 371 of International Application No.
PCT/US2016/046453, having an International Filing Date of Aug. 11, 2016,
which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/203,573,
filed Aug. 11, 2015, each of which is incorporated herein by reference in
its entirety.
TECHNICAL FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0003] This invention is related to the area of DNA analysis. In particular, it relates to analysis of genes in clinical samples.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0004] Ovarian cancer is the most lethal gynecologic malignancy, with 21,980 estimated new cases and 14,270 estimated deaths in the United States in 2014. Approximately 1.3% of women will be diagnosed with ovarian cancer during their lifetime (1). These cancers commonly present as an adnexal mass with cystic components, but are not associated with specific symptoms. As a result, two-thirds of ovarian cancers are diagnosed at late stage (Stage III and IV), when the 5-year survival is less than 30% (1).
[0005] Complicating the diagnosis of ovarian cancer is the fact that ovarian cysts are common in women of all ages, with a prevalence of 35% and 17% in pre- and post-menopausal women, respectively (2). These cysts are frequently benign and found incidentally on routine imaging (2). Though malignancy is an unusual cause of the cysts, 30% of the cysts exhibit radiographic features suspicious for malignancy, such as solid areas or mass (2). In addition to the anxiety that such findings provoke, many women undergo unnecessary surgery for cysts that are not malignant and may not be responsible for the symptoms they have. For example, only 5% of 570 women in a large ovarian cancer screening randomized trial who underwent surgical evaluation actually had a malignancy (3). Compounding this issue is the fact that surgery for ovarian cysts requires general anesthesia and is associated with significant morbidity, causing serious complications in 15% of women. These complications include damage to nerves and ureters, bleeding, infection, perforation of adjacent viscera, as well as hormonal and fertility loss (in the case of bilateral oophorectomy) (4). Even minimal procedures such as ovarian cystectomy can affect fertility in premenopausal women by decreasing follicular response and oocyte number (5, 6). If a preoperative test could be performed that indicated whether the cystic lesion was benign or malignant, unnecessary surgery and its associated complications could be avoided in a large number of patients, particularly women of reproductive age who wish to preserve their fertility, as well as women whose medical comorbidities or functional status makes anesthesia and surgery hazardous.
[0006] Ovarian cysts and tumors are classified as non-neoplastic, benign, borderline, or malignant based on microscopic examination after surgical removal (FIG. 1). Non-neoplastic cysts are by far the most common class of ovarian cyst. They are frequently functional in pre-menopausal women, arising when an egg is not released properly from either the follicle or corpus luteum and usually resolve spontaneously within several months (7). Benign cystic tumors, such as cystadenomas and cystadenofibromas, rarely progress to malignancy (8, 9). No genetic alterations have yet been identified in either non-neoplastic cysts or in benign cystic tumors (9). Neither of these cyst types requires surgery unless they are symptomatic or have undergone torsion (8). These cysts can be easily sampled with ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration in an outpatient setting without the need for anesthesia (10).
[0007] At the other end of the spectrum are epithelial ovarian cancers, which are potentially lethal and unequivocally require surgery. A dualistic model has been proposed to classify these neoplasms (11). Type I tumors are composed of low-grade serous, low-grade endometrioid, clear cell, and mucinous carcinomas. They are clinically indolent, frequently diagnosed at early stage (Stage I or II), and develop from well-established precursor lesions ("borderline" or "atypical proliferative" tumors, as described below) (12). Type I cancers commonly exhibit mutations in KRAS, BRAF, CTNNB1, PIK3CA, PTEN, ARID1A, or PPP2R1A (11). In contrast, type II tumors are generally high-grade serous carcinomas. They are highly aggressive, most often diagnosed in late stage (Stage III or IV), and have suggested origins from the distal fallopian tube (13). Type II cancers almost always harbor TP53 mutations (14). Also unlike type I cancers, which are relatively chemo-resistant and more often treated only with surgical excision, type II cancers respond to conventional chemotherapy, particularly after maximal debulking to reduce tumor burden (15, 16).
[0008] "Borderline" or "atypical proliferative" tumors lie in the middle of this spectrum, between the malignant cancers and the relatively harmless (non-neoplastic or benign) lesions. They are distinguished from carcinomas by the absence of stromal invasion and are precursors of type I cancers. In light of their potential for malignancy, the standard of care for borderline tumors is surgical excision. Following surgery, the prognosis is excellent compared to ovarian cancers, with 5-year survival rates over 85% (17). A minor but significant portion of borderline tumors recur after surgery, however, and a subset of the recurrences are found to have advanced to type I cancers (18). This progression is consistent with molecular findings: serous borderline tumors typically exhibit mutations in BRAF or KRAS, like their malignant counterparts (low-grade serous carcinoma) (19, 20). The presence of a BRAF mutation in a borderline tumor is associated with better prognosis and a low probability of progression to carcinoma (21). In contrast, KRAS mutations are associated with the progression to type I cancers (22).
[0009] The examination of fluids from pancreatic, renal, and thyroid cysts is routinely used in clinical management (23-25). The fluids have historically been studied by cytology to identify malignant cysts. Ovarian cysts share many features with these other types of cysts, in that they are common, often diagnosed incidentally, and are nearly always benign. However, aspiration of ovarian cyst fluid for cytology is not standard-of-care. From a historical perspective, the difference in diagnostic management probably lies in the fact that cytology has not proven to be very informative for ovarian cysts, particularly for distinguishing benign vs. borderline tumors (26, 27).
[0010] More recently, genetic analysis of specific types of cyst fluids has been considered as an aid to cytology, given that conventional cytology often has limited sensitivity and specificity (28). Based on the emerging success of the molecular genetic evaluation of other types of cysts, we reasoned that a similar approach could be applied to ovarian cysts. Evaluation of DNA from cells and cell fragments shed into the cyst fluid would presumably allow the identification of tumor-specific mutations. Unlike other, conventional markers of neoplasia such as CA-125, cancer gene mutations are exquisitely specific indicators of a neoplastic lesion (29). Moreover, the type of mutation can in some cases indicate the type of neoplastic lesion present (30). Yamada et al. have demonstrated that mutations can be detected in the cystic fluid of ovarian tumors by querying exons 4 to 9 of TP53, achieving sensitivities of 12.5% and 10%, for borderline and malignant tumors, respectively (31). Extremely sensitive methods for mutation detection, capable of identifying one mutant template allele among thousands of normal templates in a panel of genes, have recently been developed (32-34). In this study, we here applied one of these technologies to determine whether mutations could be identified in ovarian cyst fluids, and if so, whether they provided information that could in principle be used in diagnosis and management.
[0011] Because there is currently no reliable way to determine whether an ovarian cyst is malignant prior to surgical excision, many women undergo unnecessary, invasive surgeries for non-malignant lesions. There is a need in the art for techniques to determine whether surgery is required or unnecessary.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0012] According to one aspect of the invention a method is provided in which ovarian cyst fluid is tested for mutations in a panel of genes frequently mutated in ovarian neoplasms, wherein the panel comprises BRAF, KRAS, and TP53.
[0013] According to another aspect of the invention a method is provided in which ovarian cyst fluid is tested for mutations in a panel of genes frequently mutated in ovarian neoplasms, wherein the panel comprises BRAF, KRAS, TP53, and one or more of AKT1, APC, BRCA1, BRCA2, CDKN2A, EGFR, FBXW7, FGFR2, MAPK1, NRAS, PIK3R1, and POLE.
[0014] According to another aspect of the invention a method is provided in which ovarian cyst fluid is tested for mutations in a panel of genes frequently mutated in ovarian neoplasms, wherein the panel comprises BRAF, KRAS, TP53, and one or more of CTNNB1, PIK3CA, PTEN, ARID1A, and PPP2R1A.
[0015] According to an additional aspect of the invention a method is provided in which ovarian cyst fluid is tested for mutations in a panel of genes frequently mutated in ovarian neoplasms, wherein the panel comprises BRAF, KRAS, TP53, AKT1, APC, BRCA1, BRCA2, CDKN2A, EGFR, FBXW7, FGFR2, MAPK1, NRAS, PIK3R1, and POLE.
[0016] According to an additional aspect of the invention a method is provided in which ovarian cyst fluid is tested for mutations in a panel of genes frequently mutated in ovarian neoplasms, wherein the panel comprises BRAF, KRAS, TP53, CTNNB1, PIK3CA, PTEN, ARID1A, and PPP2R1A.
[0017] According to an additional aspect of the invention a method is provided in which ovarian cyst fluid is tested for mutations in a panel of genes frequently mutated in ovarian neoplasms, wherein the panel comprises BRAF, KRAS, TP53, AKT1, APC, BRCA1, BRCA2, CDKN2A, EGFR, FBXW7, FGFR2, MAPK1, NRAS, PIK3R1, POLE, CTNNB1, PIK3CA, PTEN, ARID1A, and PPP2R1A.
[0018] These and other embodiments which will be apparent to those of skill in the art upon reading the specification provide the art with powerful methods for assessing ovarian cysts without recourse to unnecessary surgeries.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0019] FIG. 1. Schematic showing classes of ovarian cysts and the diagnostic potential of the cyst fluid. Ovarian cysts and tumors are currently classified according to microscopic evaluation after surgical removal. The majority of ovarian cysts are non-neoplastic (often "functional" in premenopausal women). Ovarian tumors with combined cystic and solid components are either benign tumors, borderline tumors, or malignant cancers (type I or II). Only cysts associated with borderline tumors and cancers require surgical excision. We show here that the DNA purified from cyst fluid can be analyzed for somatic mutations commonly found in their associated tumors. The type of mutation detected not only indicates the type of tumor present but also could inform management.
[0020] FIGS. 2A-2B. Mutant allele fractions. (FIG. 2A) Classification by tumor type. No mutations were found in the DNA of non-neoplastic or benign cysts (red). Of the cysts that required surgery (blue), the median mutant allele fraction was higher in the cyst fluids associated with type II cancer (60.3%) than type I (7.8%) or borderline tumors (2.4%). (FIG. 2B) Classification by tumor stage. The DNA from cyst fluids of late-stage cancers had a higher median mutant allele fraction (51.2%) than those of early-stage cancers (7.4%) or borderline tumors (2.4%). Horizontal bars depict median and IQR.
[0021] FIGS. 3A-3D. (Table 1.) Patient demographics. The clinical characteristics of patients in this study and their tumor characteristics are indicated.
[0022] FIG. 4A-4E. (Table 2.) Mutations identified in tumors and cyst fluids. The mutations, mutant allele fractions, and amount of DNA recovered from cyst fluids are indicated.
[0023] FIG. 5 (Table 3.) Detection of tumor-specific mutations in cyst fluid. The fraction of samples detected and the median fraction of mutant alleles are indicated, grouped by cyst type, cancer stage, and the need for surgery.
[0024] FIG. 6 (Table 4.) Multivariate analysis for markers associated with need for surgery. The presence of a mutation, cyst DNA amount, and common serum biomarkers for ovarian cancer were analyzed for association with cysts that require surgical removal (Firth's penalized likelihood logistic regression).
[0025] FIG. 7A-7C (Fig. S1.) Markers associated with the need for surgery. Cyst DNA amount and levels of commonly used ovarian cancer serum biomarkers are plotted according to the cyst type and need for surgery. (FIG. 7A) The amounts of DNA in cyst fluids was generally higher in cysts requiring surgery (blue) than those that do not (red), but no significant correlation was found (p=0.69). (FIG. 7B) CA-125 levels were significantly higher in cysts that required surgery than those that do not (p=0.01). (FIG. 7C) Serum HE4 levels was not correlated with the need for surgery (p=0.92). P-values were calculated using Firth's penalized likelihood logistic regression in a multivariate model (See Example 1).
[0026] FIGS. 8A-8H (Table S1) Primer sequences used in multiplex assay; Forward primers (SEQ ID NO: 1-133); Reverse primers (SEQ ID NO: 134-266).
[0027] FIG. 9A-9B Mutated genes found in the cyst fluid samples. FIG. 9A shows non-neoplastic, benign, and borderline. FIG. 9B shows malignant Type I and malignant Type II. Yellow boxes represent mutations with mutant allele frequency (MAF) between 0.1% and 1%; orange boxes represent mutations with MAF between 1 and 10%; red boxes represent mutations with MAF greater than 10% (* indicates patients with insufficient DNA for analysis; ** indicates patients with two detected mutations).
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0028] The inventors have developed an assay for testing cyst fluids. Cyst fluids are typically aspirated by a needle, preferably a fine needle. The aspiration can be performed under the guidance of a radiological technique, such as ultrasound. Other guidance techniques can be used as convenient. Cyst fluids can typically be collected from any type of ovarian cyst or cystic neoplasm, and the term "cyst" is used here to refer to all types of ovarian growths with a cystic component.
[0029] Non-neoplastic ovarian cysts typically do not require surgical removal and do not display mutations. In contrast, ovarian cysts that are associated with malignancy do require surgical removal and frequently display mutations; these mutations can further indicate the type and severity of the disease. Testing for a panel that includes markers for a broad range of ovarian cysts permits the identification of cyst type and prognosis. It also permits a clinical decision to surgically remove or not.
[0030] Other markers and clinical indication can be used in combination with the ovarian cyst fluid assay results. Plasma markers such as CA-125 and HE4 can be assessed in patient plasma. Other protein or genetic markers can be used in conjunction with the ovarian cyst fluid assay. Other clinical indicators, including radiological findings and physical findings may be used in conjunction with the ovarian cyst fluid assay.
[0031] Testing may be performed using any technique that is targeted for particular genes. These are not techniques that screen for any and all gene mutations. Rather, they are designed to detect mutations in certain predetermined genes. In some cases they are designed to detect certain mutations or mutations in certain codons. Any analytic technique can be used for detecting mutations as is convenient, efficient, and sufficiently sensitive to detect mutations in ovarian cyst fluid. The assays may be hybridization based, such as using specific probes or specific primers. The assays may employ labeled probes or primers. The assays may employ labeled secondary reagents that permit the primary reagents to be detected. Such labels include radiolabels, fluorescent labels, enzymatic labels, chromophores, and the like.
[0032] A variety of different mutation types can be detected and may be useful in providing prognosis or management decisions. Such mutations include LOH, point mutations, rearrangements, frameshifts, point mutations, and copy number variations. Specific detection techniques for these mutation types or generic detection techniques may be used. It may be desirable to use control samples from other parts of the patient's body, such as a body fluid, like plasma, saliva, urine, feces, and the like. Alternatively other control samples may include tissues such as normal tissue from a non-ovary, or cells or tissues from the ovarian cyst wall.
[0033] Cyst fluid may be obtained by any technique known in the art, including but not limited to needle aspiration. The aspiration may optionally be guided by a radiological technique such as ultrasound. Cyst fluid may be aspirated before or after initial surgical removal or subsequent surgical removal.
[0034] In some embodiments, primers will incorporate unique identification DNA sequence (UID) which are molecular barcodes. These can be randomly generated and attached to templates as a means to reduce errors arising from amplification and sequencing. Probes, primers, and UIDs can incorporate non-naturally occurring modifications to DNA sequences, by internucleotide linkage modifications, by sugar modifications, and by nucleobase modifications. For example, phosphorothioate (PS) linkages can be used in which sulfur substitutes for one nonbridging phosphate oxygen. This imparts resistance to nuclease degradation. Other modifications which can be used include N3' phosphoramidate (NP) linkages, Boranophosphate internucleotide linkages, Phosphonoacetate (PACE) linkages, Morpholino phosphoramidates, Peptide nucleic acid (PNA), 2'-O-Me nucleoside analog, 2'F-RNA modification, 2'-deoxy-2'-fluoro-.beta.-D-arabino nucleic acid (2'F-ANA) modification and Locked nucleic acid (LNA).
[0035] Other techniques which are unbiased toward particular genes can be used as well for assessing genes of interest in cyst fluid. Such techniques include whole-genome or whole exome techniques. These may include assessments by nucleotide sequencing. The nucleotide sequencing may be redundant nucleotide sequencing. Targeted sequencing methods can be used as well.
[0036] The methods described here achieve high degrees of sensitivity and specificity. Sensitivity may be at least 15%, at least 20%, at least 25%, at least 50%, at least 60%, at least 70%, at least 80%, at least 85%, at least 90%, at least 95% for borderline and malignant tumors. Specificity may be at least 15%, at least 20%, at least 25%, at least 50%, at least 60%, at least 70%, at least 80%, at least 85%, at least 90%, at least 95% for borderline and malignant tumors.
[0037] Removal of ovarian cyst fluid assay from the body can be accomplished before any surgery occurs. Thus the results of the assay can help guide the decision to perform surgery. If surgery has occurred to remove the ovarian cyst, and if it returns, a sample of ovarian cyst fluid may be obtained from the body at that time. The assays will typically be performed in a clinical laboratory on samples that have been removed by a skilled clinician, such as an interventional radiologist or a surgeon. The samples may be assayed immediately or they may suitable stored and or shipped for testing. It is possible that DNA will be extracted from the sample prior to shipping it to a laboratory for testing. Results will generally be communicated back from the assaying laboratory to the clinician for communication to a patient. Results may be recorded in paper or electronic medical records.
[0038] Ovarian cancer is the most lethal gynecologic cancer in women. However screening is not recommended by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force using current diagnostic approaches, which too frequently lead to "important harms, including major surgical interventions in women who do not have cancer" (Moyer and Force, 2012). We have demonstrated here that driver mutations in ovarian tumors are also present in their associated cyst fluids. Moreover, the mutant allele frequencies in the cyst fluids are relatively high (median 12.6%, IQR of 2.7% to 40.2%), facilitating their detection. There were no mutations detected in the cyst fluids that were not also present in the tumors, and vice versa. Also importantly, no mutation was identified in non-neoplastic cysts or cysts associated with benign tumors. Overall, mutations were detected in a major fraction (87%) of cysts requiring surgery but not in any cyst that did not require surgery.
[0039] Our results demonstrate that mutations present in ovarian tumors are also present in their associated cyst fluids. Moreover, the mutant allele frequencies in the cyst fluids are relatively high (median 12.6%, IQR of 2.7% to 40.2%), facilitating their detection. There were no mutations detected in the cyst fluids that were not also present in the tumors, and vice versa. And most importantly, mutations were detected in a major fraction (85%) of cysts requiring surgery but not in any cyst that did not require surgery (Tables 2 and 3).
[0040] Although most (85%) of the 55 cysts requiring surgery had detectable mutations in their fluidic compartment, eight did not. All of these eight cysts occurred in borderline tumors or type I cancers, while mutations were always (100%) detectable in type II cancers (Tables 2 and 3). There are two potential explanations for our failure to detect mutations in these eight cysts. First, it is possible that the mutant DNA concentration in these cysts was below the level of technical sensitivity of our assay (.about.0.1% mutant allele fraction). We excluded this possibility by evaluating the tumors themselves: no mutations were detected in any of the tumors from these 8 patients. The second, and therefore more likely explanation, is that our panel of 133 amplicons, containing regions of 17 genes, was not adequate to capture the mutations that were present. Unlike type II cancers, which nearly always contain TP53 mutations (94% of the type II cancers we studied, for example), the genomic landscapes of type I cancers and borderline tumors are more heterogeneous and not as well studied (II). Further genetic evaluation of these tumors should facilitate the incorporation of additional amplicons in the panel to reach higher sensitivities. Nevertheless, the 100% sensitivity for type II cancers in our study is highly encouraging, given that these cancers account for over 90% of ovarian cancer deaths.
[0041] One limitation of our study is the number of patients evaluated. Though excision of ovarian cysts is one of the most commonly performed surgical procedures, banking of cyst fluids is not common, even in academic centers. Thus, we only had relatively small numbers (n=22) of non-neoplastic cysts and benign tumors available for study. Even so, the differences in genetic alterations among the various cyst types were striking (Tables 2 and 3). Our study will hopefully stimulate collection and analyses of ovarian cyst fluids that will be able to establish smaller confidence limits around the sensitivities and specificities reported in the current study.
[0042] A potential clinical limitation of our approach is the concern by gynecologists that needle puncture of a malignant ovarian cyst leads to seeding of the peritoneum. This concern is based on inconclusive evidence about the dangers of cyst rupture during surgery and is, at best, controversial (40). Moreover, leakage is expected to be much less likely when a tiny needle is inserted into the cyst under ultrasound-guidance than when cysts are manipulated during surgery. The idea that malignant cysts might shed cancer cells if needle-punctured also seems incongruent with the widespread practice of laparoscopic removal of ovarian cysts (41). Laparoscopic removal of a cyst carries a risk of cyst rupture, perhaps higher than needling (42). Finally, malignant pancreatic cysts are at least as dangerous as malignant ovarian cysts, yet the standard-of-care for pancreatic cysts involves repeated sampling of cyst fluid through endoscopic ultrasound over many years (43, 44). Though pancreatic cysts and ovarian cysts lie in different anatomical compartments, it is encouraging that aspiration of pancreatic cysts is not associated with an increased risk of mortality in patients with pancreatic cancer (45). Finally, recent advancements in methods to plug biopsy tracts, using materials such as absorbable gelatin slurry and torpedo, can further decrease the risk of tumor spillage associated with fine-needle aspirations (46, 47). On the basis of these observations and recent developments, we believe that ultrasound-guided aspiration of ovarian cyst fluids would likely be a safe and well-tolerated procedure.
[0043] As noted in the background of the invention section above, seven to ten patients with benign ovarian cyst lesions undergo surgery for each case of ovarian cancer found (48). In addition to the psychological impact a potential diagnosis of cancer has on patients, surgery for benign lesions entails considerable cost and morbidity. OVA-1 is the only FDA-cleared test to date that aims to distinguish benign versus malignant adnexal mass. It measures levels of five serum markers (CA-125, (3-2 microglobulin, apolipoprotein A1, prealbumin, and transferrin) and is used to stratify patients who should consult a gynecologic oncologist rather than a general gynecologist for surgery. However the test has a specificity of 43% for ovarian cancer, which is even lower than that of CA-125 alone (49). While the test might encourage patients with suspected ovarian cancer to seek specialized care, it would not decrease the number of unnecessary surgeries for women with benign adnexal masses.
[0044] This study was driven by the need for a biomarker that would help distinguish malignant ovarian tumors from benign lesions and thereby reduce the number of unnecessary surgeries. Such distinction is often difficult based on symptoms and conventional diagnostic criteria. For example, in a large study of 48,053 asymptomatic postmenopausal women who underwent ultrasound examination by skilled sonographers, 8 (17%) of the 47 ovarian cancers that were identified occurred in women with persistently normal sonographic findings (Sharma et al., 2012). All eight cases were type II cancers, highlighting the potential utility of an additional assay to detect this highly lethal and aggressive type of ovarian cancer. On the other hand, of the 4367 women with abnormal sono graphic findings, less than 1% of cases proved to have malignancy upon surgery. Furthermore, of the 32 women with borderline or Type I cancers diagnosed, 22 (69%) had a serum CA-125 level within the clinically accepted normal range (.ltoreq.35 units/mL). In our study, 18 of 18 (100%) type II cancers were detectable by virtue of the mutations found in cyst fluid DNA while none of the 18 benign or non-neoplastic cyst fluid contained such mutations. It is also important to note that the readout of our assay is quantitative and not dependent on the skill level of the reader (in contrast to sonography). Finally, the procedure can be performed minimally invasively in an outpatient setting. The goal of our test is not to replace clinical, radiologic, or sonographic evaluation but to augment them with molecular genetic markers.
[0045] Our study, though only proof-of-principle, illustrates one route to improve management of patients with ovarian cysts. Genetic analysis is not the only such route; proteomics could also provide clues to the correct diagnosis (50, 51). One can easily imagine how such additional information could be used to inform clinical practice in conjunction with current diagnostic methods. For example, if a cyst contained low amounts of DNA, no detectable mutations, and if the patient had low CA-125 levels, our data suggest that it is very unlikely to be a borderline tumor or malignant lesion. Either no surgery, or laparoscopic rather than open surgery, could be recommended for that patient, even if there was some solid component upon imaging. The option to avoid surgery would be particularly valuable for pre-menopausal women who generally have a low risk of ovarian cancer and might wish to preserve their fertility, as well as patients who are poor surgical candidates. However, our assay in its current format cannot completely rule out malignancy because a fraction of early-stage cancer patients did not have detectable mutations in their cysts. Therefore, patients whose clinical and functional status allows them to undergo surgery and anesthesia might still choose to have a surgical procedure. On the other hand, a minimally invasive test that provides additional, orthogonal information to patients and surgeons could inform their decision about the advisability of surgery.
[0046] Our data suggest that a cyst without any solid component upon imaging, and thereby unlikely via conventional criteria to be malignant, should be removed promptly if the cyst fluid contained a TP53 mutation. Radical, rather than conservative, surgery might be appropriate due to the high likelihood of an aggressive type II cancer. In contrast, if a BRAF mutation was identified, the lesion is presumably a borderline or low-grade tumor; thus conservative rather than radical surgery might be sufficient. Lastly, given that certain types of ovarian cancers (type II) tend to respond well to chemotherapy while others (type I) are relatively chemo-resistant, knowing the type of cancer present prior to surgery based on the mutation profile could help guide decisions regarding the use of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Validation of these data in a much larger, prospective trial will of course be required before incorporation of this approach into clinical practice.
[0047] The above disclosure generally describes the present invention. All references disclosed herein are expressly incorporated by reference. A more complete understanding can be obtained by reference to the following specific examples which are provided herein for purposes of illustration only, and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention.
EXAMPLE 1
Materials and Methods
Patient Samples
[0048] Cyst fluids were collected prospectively from 77 women presenting with a suspected ovarian tumor. Patients were diagnosed by transvaginal sonography or computed tomography and admitted for surgical removal of the cyst by gynecologic oncology surgeons at Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Gothenburg, Sweden. The study was approved by the ethical board of Gothenburg University and patients provided written consent. According to the approved protocol, ovarian cyst fluids were collected after removal of the cyst from the abdomen. All samples were immediately put in 4.degree. C. for 15-30 minutes, centrifuged for 10 minutes at 500 g, and aliquoted into Eppendorf tubes. The fluids were transferred to -80.degree. C., within 30-60 minutes after collection. All histology was reviewed by board-certified pathologists (Table 1).
[0049] Plasma HE4 concentrations were determined using a commercial HE4 EIA assay (Fujirebio Diagnostics) and plasma CA-125 levels were measured using the Architect CA 125 II (Abbott Diagnostics, USA). DNA was purified from tumor tissue (either freshly-frozen, or formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded) after microdissection to remove neoplastic components. DNA was purified from tumors and from cyst fluids using an AllPrep DNA kit (Qiagen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Purified DNA from all samples was quantified as previously described (52).
Statistical Analysis
[0050] A Wilcoxon rank-sum test was used to compare the amount of DNA in the cancers and borderline tumors with the amount of DNA in the simple cysts and benign tumors. The fraction of samples detected by tumor-specific mutations in the cyst fluid, as well as their 95% confidence intervals, was calculated for each tumor type (Table 3). When the presence of a mutation in the cyst fluid was used to predict the need for surgery, the sensitivity and specificity of the test, as well as their 95% confidence intervals, were calculated. Firth's penalized likelihood logistic regression was used to quantify the association between molecular features of cyst fluids and the need for surgery (Table 4) in a multivariate model. The model predictors included the presence of mutation, log10 (ng) of cyst DNA and indicators for normal CA-125 and HE4 values. Normal CA-125 values were defined as <35 U/mL and normal HE4 values were defined as <92 pmol/L and <121 pmol/L for pre- and post-menopausal women, respectively. Statistical analyses were performed using the R statistical package (version 3.1.2). Unless noted otherwise, all patient-related values are reported as means.+-.SD.
Mutation Detection and Analysis
[0051] DNA from either cyst fluids or tumors was used for multiplex PCR, as previously described (34). One-hundred-and-thirty-three primer pairs were designed to amplify 110 to 142 bp segments containing regions of interest from the following 17 genes: AKT1, APC, BRAF, CDKN2A, CTNNB1, EGFR, FBXW7, FGFR2, KRAS, MAPK1, NRAS, PIK3CA, PIK3R1, POLE, PPP2R1A, PTEN, and TP53. Primer sequences are listed in Table S1. These primers were used to amplify DNA in 25 .mu.L reactions as previously described (34). For each sample, three multiplex reactions, each containing non-overlapping amplicons, were performed. Reactions were purified with AMPure XP beads (Beckman Coulter) and eluted in 100 .mu.L of Buffer EB (Qiagen). A fraction (2.5 .mu.L) of purified PCR products were then amplified in a second round of PCR, as described (34). The PCR products were purified with AMPure and sequenced on an Illumina MiSeq instrument.
[0052] We used Safe-SeqS, an error-reduction technology for detection of low frequency mutations as described to distinguish better between genuine mutations in the samples and artifactual variants arising from sequencing and sample preparation steps, (34). High quality sequence reads were selected based on quality scores, which were generated by the sequencing instrument to indicate the probability a base was called in error. The template-specific portion of the reads was matched to reference sequences. Reads from a common template molecule were then grouped based on the unique identifier sequences (UIDs) that were incorporated as molecular barcodes. Artifactual mutations introduced during the sample preparation or sequencing steps were reduced by requiring a mutation to be present in >90% of reads in each UID family (i.e., to be scored as a "supermutant"). In addition, DNA from normal individuals was used as a control to identify potential false positive mutations (see main text). Only supermutants in samples with frequencies far exceeding their frequencies in control DNA samples (i.e., >mean+5 standard deviations) were scored as positive.
EXAMPLE 2
Characteristics of the Tumors and Cyst Fluid Samples
[0053] DNA was isolated from surgically excised ovarian cysts of 77 women. Ten of them had non-neoplastic cysts, 12 had benign tumors, 24 had borderline tumors, and 31 had cancers (13 Type I and 18 Type II). Age, histopathologic diagnosis, stage, and other clinical information are provided in Table 1. The median amount of DNA recovered from the cysts was 222 ng (interquartile range (IQR) of 53 to 3120 ng) (Table 2). There was no significant difference in the amounts of DNA between borderline tumors and type I or type II cancers (Table 2). However, the borderline tumors and cancers contained significantly more DNA than the non-neoplastic cysts or benign tumors (4453.+-.6428 ng vs. 62.+-.64 ng; p<0.001, Wilcoxon rank-sum test).
EXAMPLE 3
A Multiplex PCR-Based Test to Identify Tumor-Specific Mutations in Cyst Fluid Samples
[0054] We designed a multiplex PCR-based test that could simultaneously assess the regions of 17 genes frequently mutated in ovarian tumors. The amount of DNA shed from neoplastic cells was expected to be a minor fraction of the total DNA in the cyst fluid, with most DNA emanating from normal cells. We therefore used a sensitive detection method, called Safe-SeqS (Safe-Sequencing System), to identify mutations in cyst fluid samples (34). In brief, primers were designed to amplify 133 regions, covering 9054 distinct nucleotide positions within the 17 genes of interest (Table S1). Three multiplex PCR reactions, each containing non-overlapping amplicons, were then performed on each sample. One primer in each pair included a unique identifier (UID) for each template molecule, thereby drastically minimizing the error rates associated with PCR and sequencing, as described previously (34) (Table S1). Under the conditions used in the current experiments, mutations present in >0.1% of template molecules could generally be reliably determined. We could not perform sequencing on five cysts (two simple cysts, two cystadenomas, one borderline tumor) because there was insufficient DNA (<3 ng recovered), and these were scored in a conservative fashion, as "negative" for mutations. When this test was applied to the 22 cyst fluids obtained from patients with simple cysts (n=9) or benign tumors (n=13), no mutations were identified (Tables 2 and 3). This was in stark contrast to the fluids obtained from the 18 patients with type II cancers, all of which were found to contain a mutation (Tables 2 and 3). Ten (77%) of the 13 cyst fluids from patients with type I cancers and 19 (79%) of the 24 cyst fluids from patients with borderline tumors contained at least one detectable mutation. When categorized by the need for surgery (i.e., presence of a borderline tumor or a type I or type II cancer), the sensitivity of this test was 85% (47 of 55 cysts; 95% confidence interval of 73% to 94%) and the specificity was 100% (95% confidence interval of 78% to 100%; Table 3).
[0055] Ovarian cancers are generally detected only late in the course of disease, explaining the poor prognosis of patients. Accordingly, only 11 of the 31 cysts associated with cancers in our study had early (Stage I or II) disease (Table 1). As expected, most of these were type I carcinomas (n=8). Nevertheless, it was encouraging that mutant DNA could be detected in nine (82%) of these 11 patients (Table 3). Mutations could be detected in 95% of the 20 patients with Stage III or IV cancers (Table 3).
[0056] A variety of control experiments were performed to confirm the integrity of these results. One informative positive control was provided by the results of sequencing of DNA from the tumors, using the identical method used to analyze DNA from the cyst fluids. Fifty-three of the 55 borderline and malignant cases had tumor available for this purpose. Every mutation identified in a tumor was found in its cyst fluid, and vice versa. As expected, the mutant allele frequencies in the tumors were often, but not always, higher than in the cyst fluid (Table 2). As another positive control, we used an independent PCR and sequencing reaction to confirm each of the cyst fluid mutations listed in Table 2. This validated not only the presence of a mutation, but also confirmed its fractional representation. The median relative difference between the fractions of mutant alleles in replicate experiments was 7.0% (IQR of 3.5% to 8.9%). Finally, four patients were found to have two independent mutations (Table 2). For example, the cyst fluid of patient OVCYST 081, who had high-grade endometrioid carcinoma, had a missense mutation (R280K) in TP53 plus an in-frame deletion of PIK3R1 at codons 458 and 459 of PIK3R1. The TP53 mutation was found in 3.0% of alleles while the PIK3R1 mutation was found in 3.7% of the alleles analyzed. Similar mutant allele frequencies among completely different mutations in the cyst fluid of three other patients provided further indicators of reproducibility (Table 2). All genetic assays were performed in a blinded manner, with the operator unaware of the diagnoses of the patients from whom the cyst fluids were obtained.
[0057] In addition to DNA from normal individuals used as controls, additional negative controls were provided by the simple cysts and benign tumors. Using the identical assay, none of the DNA from their cyst fluids contained detectable mutations (Table 2). A final control was provided by the borderline and malignant tumors themselves. In general, only one or two of the 9054 base-pairs (bp) queried were mutated in any one tumor (Table 2). The other 9000 bp could then be independently queried in the corresponding cyst fluid, and none of these positions were found to be mutated.
EXAMPLE 4
Relationship Between the Type of Tumor Present and the Type of Mutation Found in the Associated Cyst Fluid Sample
[0058] The mutant allele fractions in the cyst fluids tended to be higher in the type II cancers (median of 60.3%) than the type I cancers (median of 7.8%) or borderline tumors (median of 2.4%), though there was considerable overlap (Tables 2 and 3). On the other hand, the type of mutation varied considerably among these cysts. In type I tumors, the genes mutated were BRAF (n=1), KRAS (n=5), NRAS (n=1), PIK3R1 (n=1), PPP2R1A (n=1), PTEN (n=1), or TP53 (n=3). Two distinct mutations were found per sample in three type I cancers. One type I cancer had a BRAF mutation. This BRAF mutation (V600_S605>D) is unusual that it resulted from an in-frame deletion/insertion rather than the base substitution (V600E) characteristic of the vast majority of BRAF mutations reported in the literature. This mutation has been observed in a papillary thyroid cancer and a cutaneous melanoma (35, 36). The deletion results in loss of a phosphorylation site in the activation loop of BRAF, while the insertion of an aspartic acid has been suggested to increase BRAF kinase activity by mimicking an activating phosphorylation (37). In contrast, all but one type II cancers (94% of 18) had mutations in TP53; the only exception was OVCYST 081, a high-grade endometrioid carcinoma. The borderline tumors were distinguished by yet a different pattern from that of the either type I or type II cancers. Of the 19 mutations in borderline tumors, 12 (63%) were at BRAF V600E, never observed in type I or type II cancers, and the remainder were at KRAS 12 or 61 (Table 2).
EXAMPLE 5
Markers Associated with the Need for Surgery
[0059] A multivariate analysis was used to identify the most informative molecular features of cyst fluids and to compare them to the commonly used serum biomarkers for ovarian cancer, HE4 (human epididymis protein 4) and CA-125 (38, 39) (Table 4). We defined "informative" as indicating a need for surgery (i.e., borderline tumors or type I or II cancers). The amount of DNA in cyst fluids was generally, but not significantly, higher in the cysts requiring surgery (p=0.69, Table 4), though there were many cysts not requiring surgery that had higher DNA levels than cysts requiring surgery (Figure S1A). Similarly, the serum CA-125 levels were significantly higher in cysts requiring surgery (p=0.01, Table 4), but there were many cysts not requiring surgery that had higher levels than those requiring surgery (Figure S1B). Serum HE4 levels were not correlated with cyst type (P=0.92, Table 4; Figure S1C). On the other hand, the presence of a mutation was highly informative for the presence of a cyst requiring surgery in the multivariate analysis, as no mutations were found in cysts not requiring surgery (P<0.001, Table 4).
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Sequence CWU
1
1
266147DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 1cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgcaaca tgactgtcct ttcacca
47245DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 2cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgggcaa ctaccatcca gcaac
45352DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 3cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggtatt ctaatttggc ataaggcata ga
52449DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 4cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtgatg gttatggtaa aagaggtca
49553DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 5cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgggatg ataatgatgg agaactagat aca
53647DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 6cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtcgat ttgtttctga accattg
47750DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 7cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtttgt tggtctctct tcttcttcat
50846DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 8cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgcggtt ttactgcttt gtccag
46954DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 9cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggaaaa acatattgga gtatcttcta caca
541045DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 10cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggtgct gtgacactgc tggaa
451145DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 11cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgagaat cagccaggca caaag
451246DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 12cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggctcc gttcagagtg aaccat
461345DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 13cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgagcac tcaggctgga tgaac
451447DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 14cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggggaa tgaaacagaa tcagagc
471549DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 15cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgcaacc tgttttgtga tggtagaag
491644DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 16cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggggtc gggtagagga ggtg
441742DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 17cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggaccc cgccactctc ac
421845DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 18cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggccat ggaaccagac agaaa
451945DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 19cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgctgga tcccagaagg tgaga
452045DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 20cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtccct ggtgtcagga aaatg
452148DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 21cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgttgtt tttctgtttc tccctctg
482245DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 22cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggcaga gtatttgggc gaatg
452352DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 23cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtttac ctctattgtt ggatcatatt cg
522449DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 24cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgggaaa taaatgtgat ttgccttct
492546DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 25cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgacacc cccaggattc ttacag
462645DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 26cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgccccc tccatcaact tcttc
452750DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 27cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgcaatg aattaaggga aaatgacaaa
502848DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 28cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggcatg ccaatctctt cataaatc
482948DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 29cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggggtt ttgggctgat attaaaac
483049DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 30cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtgttt ccatgtcagc tattttgtt
493152DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 31cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtgcag taagagattg ttctatgaaa gg
523245DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 32cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtttct tttgcctgca ggatt
453347DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 33cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgcctga attgtagcaa tcaccaa
473445DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 34cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggatga agatttgccc catca
453545DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 35cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgcccat cccaggagct tactt
453648DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 36cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgttccc ttctgagagt gtcagtgt
483743DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 37cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgagcca caggctccca gac
433854DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 38cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgaatag ttgttttaga agatatttgc aagc
543952DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 39cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgaagat tcaggcaatg tttgttagta tt
524054DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 40cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtttct tattctgagg ttatcttttt acca
544148DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 41cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggcaat tcactgtaaa gctggaaa
484249DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 42cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtcaat ttggcttctc ttttttttc
494350DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 43cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgaggca tttcctgtga aataatactg
504451DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 44cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtctat gtgatcaaga aatcgatagc a
514551DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 45cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtgggt tttcatttta aattttcttt c
514652DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 46cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgggtcc attttcagtt tattcaagtt ta
524746DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 47cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgccttc caatggatcc actcac
464844DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 48cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgagccc cctagcagag acct
444944DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 49cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgagctc ccagaatgcc agag
445047DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 50cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggccct gactttcaac tctgtct
475144DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 51cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggccat ggccatctac aagc
445245DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 52cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggtgga aggaaatttg cgtgt
455345DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 53cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtgtga tgatggtgag gatgg
455446DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 54cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtgcct cttgcttctc ttttcc
465547DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 55cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgaagaa gaaaacggca ttttgag
475645DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 56cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggttcc gagagctgaa tgagg
455745DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 57cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggccac ctgaagtcca aaaag
455846DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 58cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtcctt gtagccaatg aaggtg
465945DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 59cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgcccaa ggcatctcat cgtag
456047DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 60cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtgtta cccagctcct cttcatc
476146DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 61cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggccaa agtcatggaa gaagtg
466249DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 62cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgaagtc ggaaaattca aataggaca
496352DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 63cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgaagat gatgaaagta agttttgcag tt
526448DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 64cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgagatg agcagttgaa ctctggaa
486546DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 65cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgatttt ggacagcagg aatgtg
466647DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 66cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtcaat aggctgatcc acatgac
476748DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 67cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgttcct tcatcacaga aacagtca
486852DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 68cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgcttgc aaagtttctt ctattaacca ag
526946DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 69cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgggtca gctgaagatc ctgtga
467045DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 70cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgggtgc tcagacaccc aaaag
457145DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 71cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgcatgc caccaagcag aagta
457244DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 72cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggagcc tcgatgagcc attt
447352DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 73cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgaggac ctattagatg attcagatga tg
527453DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 74cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtgttt tcctttactt actacacctc aga
537541DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 75cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggggga gagcaggcag c
417646DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 76cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtggct ctgaccattc tgttct
467743DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 77cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgcttcc tggacacgct ggt
437844DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 78cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtgtgc cagggacctt acct
447945DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 79cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgcgatc tgcacacacc agttg
458046DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 80cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggaagt cccaaccatg acaaga
468148DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 81cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgttgag acaggccagt gtttacat
488245DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 82cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggctgg gcatcactgt aaacc
458346DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 83cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggcagc cagaaatgtt ttggta
468448DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 84cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgttctc ccttctcagg attcctac
488546DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 85cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgacatt caacccacac aagagg
468645DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 86cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggatgt ggctcgccaa ttaac
458746DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 87cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgttatt ccagacgcat ttccac
468848DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 88cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtttga tgacattgca tacattcg
488948DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 89cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtcagg gaagaagtga atgaaaaa
489050DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 90cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtctag gatcaagttg tcaaagaaga
509148DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 91cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgccaaa tgaaaaggac agctattg
489251DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 92cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgttgac agtagaagaa gattggaaga a
519345DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 93cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggtctg tgtggtgccc agttt
459447DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 94cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgacatg gggatgatct cactctt
479551DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 95cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggctgc atatttcaga tatttctttc c
519654DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 96cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgcagta agatacagtc tatcgggttt aagt
549747DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 97cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgaaacc caaaatctgt tttccaa
479853DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 98cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggcgct atgtgtatta ttatagctac ctg
539945DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 99cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtgtgg tctgccagct aaagg
4510051DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 100cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtttgg gtaaatacat tcttcatacc a
5110152DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 101cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtttaa caaaaaatga tcttgacaaa gc
5210245DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 102cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtagag gagccgtcaa atcca
4510346DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 103cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggcaat ggatgatttg atgctg
4610446DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 104cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggcatt gaagtctcat ggaagc
4610545DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 105cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgctccg tcatgtgctg tgact
4510643DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 106cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggtccc caggcctctg att
4310747DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 107cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtggct ctgactgtac caccatc
4710844DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 108cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgcgtgt ttgtgcctgt cctg
4410948DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 109cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtttta tcacctttcc ttgcctct
4811042DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 110cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgccctg gctccttccc ag
4211146DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 111cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgatgtc atctctcctc cctgct
4611249DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 112cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtgatt atgtttttga caccaatcg
4911345DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 113cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggagaa cgcggaattg gtcta
4511450DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 114cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggttct atgccttatg ccaaattaga
5011545DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 115cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgagccg acctagccca taaaa
4511646DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 116cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgatgtg gttggaactt gaggtg
4611747DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 117cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgccaat ggttcagaaa caaatcg
4711852DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 118cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgaagaa gagagaccaa caaattatag ca
5211947DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 119cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgccgaa catatgtctt caagcag
4712054DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 120cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggatgt agttcattat catctttgtc atca
5412145DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 121cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgcagga gaccccactc atgtt
4512246DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 122cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgctcaa acagctcaaa ccaagc
4612345DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 123cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtttgc cacggaaagt actcc
4512448DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 124cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgaaaac caagagaaag aggcagaa
4812542DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 125cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgagcct tcggctgact gg
4212641DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 126cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgccgag tggcggagct g
4112741DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 127cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgaggag ctgggccatc g
4112853DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 128cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgagata atattgaagc tgtagggaaa aaa
5312946DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 129cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtttga agaacagtgc cagacc
4613053DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 130cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggaaaa cacaacatga atataaacat caa
5313150DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 131cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatggctac ctgttaaaga atcatctgga
5013246DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 132cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgtgact gctcttttca cccatc
4613344DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 133cacacaggaa
acagctatga ccatgctgca ccagcagctc ctac
4413455DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 134cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntagac caattccgcg ttctc
5513560DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 135cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncttct gtcttcctga gaggtatgaa
6013658DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 136cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntgtgt gacagatgag agaaatgc
5813761DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 137cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntgcac tatgtatttt atgggctagg 60t
6113854DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 138cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngtttg ggtcttgccc atct
5413961DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 139cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncctgt ttatactgag agcactgatg 60a
6114059DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 140cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntcaaa atgtaagcca gtctttgtg
5914156DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 141cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncgtca tgtggatcag cctatt
5614257DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 142cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnccatc caagttctgc acagagt
5714355DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 143cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncagac gacacaggaa gcaga
5514455DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 144cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnaacat gagtggggtc tcctg
5514555DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 145cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnaggag gtggtggagg tgttt
5514657DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 146cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnggacc taagcaagct gcagtaa
5714763DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 147cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntcaat atcatcatca tctgaatcat 60cta
6314855DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 148cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnccatg ccaacaaagt catca
5514952DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 149cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnctccc gctgcagacc ct
5215053DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 150cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngctcc tcagccaggt cca
5315155DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 151cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncctca ggattgcctt tacca
5515254DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 152cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncccac acagcaaagc agaa
5415357DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 153cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngcagc atgtcaagat cacagat
5715455DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 154cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnctgca acatgaccca tcaaa
5515557DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 155cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntctgg tgtcagagat ggagatg
5715663DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 156cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntgact gaatataaac ttgtggtagt 60tgg
6315763DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 157cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntttca gtgttactta cctgtcttgt 60ctt
6315855DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 158cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncgcct gtcctcatgt attgg
5515955DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 159cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngaaaa agccgaaggt cacaa
5516060DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 160cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnctcca ttttagcact tacctgtgac
6016155DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 161cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntccaa agcctcttgc tcagt
5516257DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 162cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnccata tttcccatct cgatgaa
5716360DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 163cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntgtaa ttttttccct acagcttcaa
6016455DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 164cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngggtc tggcactgtt cttca
5516556DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 165cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntactc agctgcctgc ttcttc
5616659DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 166cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnacgta tgaacagcat taaaccaga
5916755DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 167cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntctcc cggacaagaa aagtg
5516855DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 168cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntggca tttgacattg agacg
5516953DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 169cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntggtg atgcccactc tgc
5317058DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 170cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntgaca gaaaggtaaa gaggagca
5817158DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 171cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnttaat ggtggctttt tgtttgtt
5817255DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 172cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngcaat taaatttggc ggtgt
5517359DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 173cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncatga ttgtcatctt cacttagcc
5917457DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 174cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntggtc cttacttccc catagaa
5717562DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 175cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncactg gtctataatc cagatgattc 60tt
6217655DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 176cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntgaac ttgtcttccc gtcgt
5517758DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 177cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnaagta tcggttggct ttgtcttt
5817860DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 178cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnaggtt cattgtcact aacatctggt
6017957DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 179cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnctgac accactgact ctgatcc
5718053DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 180cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnactgc cttccgggtc act
5318154DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 181cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncagcc caacccttgt cctt
5418255DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 182cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntggga agggacagaa gatga
5518353DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 183cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnggggg tgtggaatca acc
5318454DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 184cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnaccag ccctgtcgtc tctc
5418555DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 185cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncttaa cccctcctcc cagag
5518656DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 186cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntcatc ttgggcctgt gttatc
5618756DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 187cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngcgga gattctcttc ctctgt
5618855DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 188cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnccagc caaagaagaa accac
5518955DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 189cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntagga aggcagggga gtagg
5519054DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 190cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngaggc tgtcagtggg gaac
5419156DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 191cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnagggt ctgacgggta gagtgt
5619258DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 192cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnaggac agtcatgttg ccagtatt
5819358DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 193cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnaagtt cctggatttt ctgttgct
5819455DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 194cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngtgta tgggcagcag agctt
5519559DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 195cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntgacc tcttttacca taaccatca
5919663DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 196cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntggtg tatctagttc tccatcatta 60tca
6319758DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 197cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnccttg attgtctttg ctcacttt
5819859DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 198cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnttctt gacacaaaga ctggcttac
5919962DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 199cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntgata agcctaccaa ttatagtgaa 60cg
6220056DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 200cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntgatt ctgcctcttg gcatta
5620161DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 201cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntgatt acatcctatt tcatcttcag 60c
6120256DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 202cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntcgct cctgaagaaa attcaa
5620355DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 203cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnctggc aatcgaacga ctctc
5520456DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 204cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngcagc ttgcttaggt ccactc
5620559DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 205cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntggtt ttcatttgat tctttaggc
5920657DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 206cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnggtgg aggtaatttt gaagcag
5720757DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 207cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnaactg ttcaaactga tgggacc
5720854DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 208cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncacct cctctacccg accc
5420952DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 209cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngggtc gggtgagagt gg
5221053DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 210cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngcagg taccgtgcga cat
5321154DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 211cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnggaga agctcccaac caag
5421254DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 212cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngcatc tgcctcacct ccac
5421355DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 213cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncggac actcaaagtg tggaa
5521455DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 214cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncagtc tctggatccc acacc
5521555DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 215cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntcttc cctctctcca ccaga
5521656DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 216cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnactgc catcgactta cattgg
5621756DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 217cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntgtac tggtccctca ttgcac
5621856DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 218cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnatcta tgtccctgaa gcagca
5621955DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 219cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngattg tcagtgcgct tttcc
5522057DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 220cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnacatt cacgtaggtt gcacaaa
5722160DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 221cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngatcc aatccatttt tgttgtccag
6022258DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 222cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncagct atattccctg gcttacct
5822355DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 223cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnctggg atgtgcgggt atatt
5522456DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 224cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnttctt tctcattgcc ttcacg
5622556DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 225cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntggtc tctcgtcttt ctcagc
5622655DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 226cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngactg cccacaggaa ggtaa
5522755DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 227cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntactt ccggaacctg tgctc
5522862DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 228cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncatca tcaatattgt tcctgtatac 60gc
6222963DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 229cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntttta aacttttctt ttagttgtgc 60tga
6323055DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 230cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnaggca caagaggccc tagat
5523156DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 231cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncgcca ctgaacattg gaatag
5623262DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 232cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngttct gtttgtggaa gaactctact 60tt
6223356DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 233cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntctgc acgctctata ctgcaa
5623455DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 234cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnacaag tcaacaaccc ccaca
5523560DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 235cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnctgat cttcatcaaa aggttcattc
6023653DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 236cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncggtg taggagctgc tgg
5323755DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 237cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnccctt cccagaaaac ctacc
5523857DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 238cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncaaca agatgttttg ccaactg
5723957DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 239cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncgaaa agtgtttctg tcatcca
5724053DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 240cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngtggc aagtggctcc tga
5324155DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 241cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngcttc ttgtcctgct tgctt
5524260DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 242cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncaaga cttagtacct gaagggtgaa
6024355DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 243cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncttct ccccctcctc tgttg
5524456DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 244cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnagtct gagtcaggcc cttctg
5624557DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 245cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngaaga ggagctgggt aacactg
5724655DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 246cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnccatg actttggcaa tctgg
5524755DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 247cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnggatt caatcgaggg tttca
5524855DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 248cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntgaag gactttgcct tccag
5524961DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 249cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngaccc aaacacataa tagaagatga 60a
6125063DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 250cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntcttc agagtaacgt tcactataat 60tgg
6325160DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 251cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnaaaat gactgtttct gtgatgaagg
6025255DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 252cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnagcct tttgaggctg accac
5525360DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 253cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnngctga cctagttcca atcttttctt
6025456DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 254cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnatgcc acttaccatt ccactg
5625555DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 255cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnagcat ctggaagaac ctgga
5525658DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 256cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncccat tgtcattttc ctgaactg
5825757DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 257cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnttggc atggcagaaa taataca
5725855DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 258cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnggcct ccgaccgtaa ctatt
5525954DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 259cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncacca gcgtgtccag gaag
5426060DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 260cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnacaaa ttctcagatc atcagtcctc
6026155DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 261cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnaaaac tcacctggga tgtgc
5526256DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 262cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnagcac aagaacaagg gaaaca
5626358DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 263cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncatta ttgctatggg atttcctg
5826458DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 264cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnnggaag gatgagaatt tcaagcac
5826555DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 265cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnntcatc tggacctggg tcttc
5526655DNAArtificial SequenceForward and reverse primers 266cgacgtaaaa
cgacggccag tnnnnnnnnn nnnnncagaa tgcaagaagc ccaga 55
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