Issue 23, 2013

Spectrophotometric and ultrasensitive DNA bioassay by circular-strand displacement polymerization reaction

Abstract

We demonstrated a new spectrophotometric DNA detection approach based on a circular strand-displacement polymerization reaction for the quantitative detection of sequence specific DNA. In this assay, the hybridization of an immobilized hairpin probe on the microtiter plate, to target DNA, results in a conformational change and leads to a stem separation. A short primer thus anneals with the open stem and triggers a polymerization reaction, allowing a cyclic reaction comprising the release of target DNA and hybridization of the target with the remaining immobilized hairpin probe. Through this cyclical process, a large number of duplex DNA complexes are produced. Finally, the biotin modified duplex DNA products can be detected via the HRP catalyzed substrate 3,3′,5,5′-tetramethylbenzidine using a spectrophotometer. As a proof of concept, a short DNA sequence (20-nt) related to the South East Asia (SEA) type deletion of α-thalassemia was chosen as the model target. This proposed assay has a very high sensitivity and selectivity with a dynamic response ranging from 0.1 fM to 10 nM and the detection limit was 8 aM. It can be performed within 2 hours, and it can differentiate target SEA DNA from wild-type DNA. By substituting the hairpin probes used in the present work, this assay can be used to detect other subtypes of genetic disorders.

Graphical abstract: Spectrophotometric and ultrasensitive DNA bioassay by circular-strand displacement polymerization reaction

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Jul 2013
Accepted
14 Sep 2013
First published
16 Sep 2013

Analyst, 2013,138, 7182-7187

Spectrophotometric and ultrasensitive DNA bioassay by circular-strand displacement polymerization reaction

L. Yu, W. Wu, J. Chen, Z. Xiao, C. Ge, P. Lie, Z. Fang, L. Chen, Y. Zhang and L. Zeng, Analyst, 2013, 138, 7182 DOI: 10.1039/C3AN01347B

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