TY - JOUR
T1 - Study on Defective T Junction-Mediated Strand Displacement Amplification and Its Application in Microchip Electrophoretic Detection of Longer Bacterial 16S rDNA
AU - Luo, Feifei
AU - Lu, Yuqi
AU - Geng, Xing
AU - Li, Zhi
AU - Dai, Ge
AU - Chu, Zhaohui
AU - Zhang, Jingwen
AU - Zhang, Fan
AU - He, Pingang
AU - Wang, Qingjiang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2021/2/23
Y1 - 2021/2/23
N2 - Current strand displacement amplification (SDA)-based nucleic acid sensing methods generally rely on a ssDNA template that involves complementary bases to the endonuclease recognition sequence, which has the limitation of detecting only short nucleic acids. Herein, a new SDA method in which the defective T junction structure is first used to support SDA (dT-SDA) was proposed and applied in longer DNA detection. In dT-SDA, an auxiliary probe and a primer were designed to specifically identify the target gene, following the formation of a stable defective T junction structure through proximity hybridization, and the formation of defective T junctions could further trigger cascade SDA cycling to produce numerous ssDNA products. The quantity of these ssDNA products was detected through microchip electrophoresis (MCE) and could be transformed to the concentration of the target gene. Moreover, the applicability of this developed strategy in detecting long genomic DNA was verified by detecting bacterial 16S rDNA. This proposed dT-SDA strategy consumes less time and has satisfactory sensitivity, which has great potential for effective bacterial screening and infection diagnosis.
AB - Current strand displacement amplification (SDA)-based nucleic acid sensing methods generally rely on a ssDNA template that involves complementary bases to the endonuclease recognition sequence, which has the limitation of detecting only short nucleic acids. Herein, a new SDA method in which the defective T junction structure is first used to support SDA (dT-SDA) was proposed and applied in longer DNA detection. In dT-SDA, an auxiliary probe and a primer were designed to specifically identify the target gene, following the formation of a stable defective T junction structure through proximity hybridization, and the formation of defective T junctions could further trigger cascade SDA cycling to produce numerous ssDNA products. The quantity of these ssDNA products was detected through microchip electrophoresis (MCE) and could be transformed to the concentration of the target gene. Moreover, the applicability of this developed strategy in detecting long genomic DNA was verified by detecting bacterial 16S rDNA. This proposed dT-SDA strategy consumes less time and has satisfactory sensitivity, which has great potential for effective bacterial screening and infection diagnosis.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85101568471
U2 - 10.1021/acs.analchem.0c04991
DO - 10.1021/acs.analchem.0c04991
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85101568471
SN - 0003-2700
VL - 93
SP - 3551
EP - 3558
JO - Analytical Chemistry
JF - Analytical Chemistry
IS - 7
ER -