Issue 11, 2013

Ultrasensitive single-nucleotide polymorphism detection using target-recycled ligation, strand displacement and enzymatic amplification

Abstract

We report herein the development of a highly sensitive and selective approach for label-free DNA detection by combining target-recycled ligation (TRL), magnetic nanoparticle assisted target capture/separation, and efficient enzymatic amplification. We show that our approach can detect as little as 30 amol (600 fM in 50 μL) of unlabelled single-stranded DNA targets and offer an exquisitely high discrimination ratio (up to >380 fold with background correction) between a perfect-match cancer mutant and its single-base mismatch (wild-type) DNA target. Furthermore, it can quantitate the rare cancer mutant (KRAS codon 12) in a large excess of coexisting wild-type DNAs down to 0.75%. This sensor appears to be well-suited for sensitive SNP detection and a wide range of DNA mutation based diagnostic applications.

Graphical abstract: Ultrasensitive single-nucleotide polymorphism detection using target-recycled ligation, strand displacement and enzymatic amplification

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
26 Feb 2013
Accepted
04 Apr 2013
First published
10 Apr 2013
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Nanoscale, 2013,5, 5027-5035

Ultrasensitive single-nucleotide polymorphism detection using target-recycled ligation, strand displacement and enzymatic amplification

Y. Zhang, Y. Guo, P. Quirke and D. Zhou, Nanoscale, 2013, 5, 5027 DOI: 10.1039/C3NR01010D

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