Probing the role of ligation and exonuclease digestion towards non-specific amplification in bioanalytical RCA assays†
Abstract
Non-specific amplification (NSA, amplification in the absence of a target analyte) in bioanalytical rolling circle amplification (RCA) assays, especially those involving pre-synthesized circular DNA (cDNA), affects its analytical sensitivity. Despite extensive development of RCA-based bioanalytical methods, the NSA in RCA remains uncharacterized in terms of its magnitude or origin. NSA may originate from inefficient ligation or succeeding cDNA purification steps. This study comprehensively quantifies NSA across several ligation and digestion techniques for the first time since the innovation of RCA. To quantify the NSA in RCA, cDNAs were prepared using self-annealing, splint-padlock, or cohesive end ligations. The cDNAs were then subjected to nine different exonuclease digestion steps and quantified for NSA under linear as well as hyperbranched RCA conditions. We investigated buffer compositions, divalent ion concentrations, single or dual enzyme digestion, cohesive end lengths, and splint lengths. The optimized conditions successfully mitigated absolute NSA by 30–100-fold and relative NSA (normalized against primer-assisted RCA) to ∼5%. Besides understanding the mechanistic origin of NSA, novel aspects of enzyme–substrate selectivity, buffer composition, and the role of divalent ions were discovered. With increasing bioanalytical RCA applications, this study will help standardize NSA-free assays.