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Dive into the research topics where Fredrik Dahl is active.

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Featured researches published by Fredrik Dahl.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2005

Multiplex amplification enabled by selective circularization of large sets of genomic DNA fragments

Fredrik Dahl; Mats Gullberg; Johan Stenberg; Ulf Landegren; Mats Nilsson

We present a method to specifically select large sets of DNA sequences for parallel amplification by PCR using target-specific oligonucleotide constructs, so-called selectors. The selectors are oligonucleotide duplexes with single-stranded target-complementary end-sequences that are linked by a general sequence motif. In the selection process, a pool of selectors is combined with denatured restriction digested DNA. Each selector hybridizes to its respective target, forming individual circular complexes that are covalently closed by enzymatic ligation. Non-circularized fragments are removed by exonucleolysis, enriching for the selected fragments. The general sequence that is introduced into the circularized fragments allows them to be amplified in parallel using a universal primer pair. The procedure avoids amplification artifacts associated with conventional multiplex PCR where two primers are used for each target, thereby reducing the number of amplification reactions needed for investigating large sets of DNA sequences. We demonstrate the specificity, reproducibility and flexibility of this process by performing a 96-plex amplification of an arbitrary set of specific DNA sequences, followed by hybridization to a cDNA microarray. Eighty-nine percent of the selectors generated PCR products that hybridized to the expected positions on the array, while little or no amplification artifacts were observed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Multigene amplification and massively parallel sequencing for cancer mutation discovery

Fredrik Dahl; Johan Stenberg; Simon Fredriksson; Katrina Welch; Michael Zhang; Mats Nilsson; David C. Bicknell; Walter F. Bodmer; Ronald W. Davis; Hanlee P. Ji

We have developed a procedure for massively parallel resequencing of multiple human genes by combining a highly multiplexed and target-specific amplification process with a high-throughput parallel sequencing technology. The amplification process is based on oligonucleotide constructs, called selectors, that guide the circularization of specific DNA target regions. Subsequently, the circularized target sequences are amplified in multiplex and analyzed by using a highly parallel sequencing-by-synthesis technology. As a proof-of-concept study, we demonstrate parallel resequencing of 10 cancer genes covering 177 exons with average sequence coverage per sample of 93%. Seven cancer cell lines and one normal genomic DNA sample were studied with multiple mutations and polymorphisms identified among the 10 genes. Mutations and polymorphisms in the TP53 gene were confirmed by traditional sequencing.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

Multiplex amplification of all coding sequences within 10 cancer genes by Gene-Collector

Simon Fredriksson; Johan Banér; Fredrik Dahl; Angela Chu; Hanlee P. Ji; Katrina Welch; Ronald W. Davis

Herein we present Gene-Collector, a method for multiplex amplification of nucleic acids. The procedure has been employed to successfully amplify the coding sequence of 10 human cancer genes in one assay with uniform abundance of the final products. Amplification is initiated by a multiplex PCR in this case with 170 primer pairs. Each PCR product is then specifically circularized by ligation on a Collector probe capable of juxtapositioning only the perfectly matched cognate primer pairs. Any amplification artifacts typically associated with multiplex PCR derived from the use of many primer pairs such as false amplicons, primer-dimers etc. are not circularized and degraded by exonuclease treatment. Circular DNA molecules are then further enriched by randomly primed rolling circle replication. Amplification was successful for 90% of the targeted amplicons as seen by hybridization to a custom resequencing DNA micro-array. Real-time quantitative PCR revealed that 96% of the amplification products were all within 4-fold of the average abundance. Gene-Collector has utility for numerous applications such as high throughput resequencing, SNP analyses, and pathogen detection.


Comparative and Functional Genomics | 2003

Padlock and proximity probes for in situ and array-based analyses : tools for the post genomic era

Ulf Landegren; Fredrik Dahl; Mats Nilsson; Simon Fredriksson; Johan Banér; Mats Gullberg; Jonas Jarvius; Sigrun M. Gustafsdottir; Ola Söderberg; Olle Ericsson; Johan Stenberg; Edith Schallmeiner

Highly specific high-throughput assays will be required to take full advantage of the accumulating information about the macromolecular composition of cells and tissues, in order to characterize biological systems in health and disease. We discuss the general problem of detection specificity and present the approach our group has taken, involving the reformatting of analogue biological information to digital reporter segments of genetic information via a series of DNA ligation assays. The assays enable extensive, coordinated analyses of the numbers and locations of genes, transcripts and protein.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2005

PieceMaker : selection of DNA fragments for selector-guided multiplex amplification

Johan Stenberg; Fredrik Dahl; Ulf Landegren; Mats Nilsson

We describe PieceMaker, a software tool for the design of applications of selector probes–oligonucleotide probes that direct circularization of target nucleic acid molecules. Such probes can be combined in parallel to circularize a selection of fragments from restriction digested total genomic DNA. These fragments can then be amplified in a single PCR using a common primer pair, yielding substrates for subsequent analyses, such as parallel genotyping or sequencing. However, designing multiplex selector assays is a laborious task. The PieceMaker program alleviates this problem by selecting restriction enzymes to generate suitable fragments for selection, and generating the output data required to design the selector probes.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

MLGA—a rapid and cost-efficient assay for gene copy-number analysis

Magnus Isaksson; Johan Stenberg; Fredrik Dahl; Ann-Charlotte Thuresson; Marie-Louise Bondeson; Mats Nilsson

Structural variation is an important cause of genetic variation. Whole genome analysis techniques can efficiently identify copy-number variable regions but there is a need for targeted methods, to verify and accurately size variable regions, and to diagnose large sample cohorts. We have developed a technique based on multiplex amplification of size-coded selectively circularized genomic fragments, which is robust, cheaper and more rapid than current multiplex targeted copy-number assays.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

Circle-to-circle amplification for precise and sensitive DNA analysis

Fredrik Dahl; Johan Banér; Mats Gullberg; Maritha Mendel-Hartvig; Ulf Landegren; Mats Nilsson


Nucleic Acids Research | 2002

Real-time monitoring of rolling-circle amplification using a modified molecular beacon design.

Mats Nilsson; Mats Gullberg; Fredrik Dahl; Karoly Szuhai; Anton K. Raap


Trends in Biotechnology | 2006

Analyzing genes using closing and replicating circles

Mats Nilsson; Fredrik Dahl; Chatarina Larsson; Mats Gullberg; Johan Stenberg


Human Mutation | 2002

Making ends meet in genetic analysis using padlock probes.

Mats Nilsson; Johan Banér; Maritha Mendel-Hartvig; Fredrik Dahl; Dan-Oscar Antson; Mats Gullberg; Ulf Landegren

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