Abstract

Digital polymerase chain reaction (dPCR) is emerging as a powerful method for nucleic acid detection due to its unprecedented sensitivity and precision. However, most current dPCR platforms are inherently limited by their low multiplexing ability due to primer-pair cross interactions and spectral overlap of available fluorophores. Here, we present a novel and robust method for multiplexing dPCR that is free from primer dimerization and fluorescence channel number limitation, enabling highly precise and multiplexed detection of nucleic acid targets. By prestoring target-specific primers and probes in different storage chambers, the method physically separates reactions and thus avoids the primer-pair cross interactions and spectral overlap of different fluorescent probes that usually occur within a single-tube reaction. Furthermore, a dissolvable delay valve (DDV) is embedded between each pair of the reagent prestorage chamber and reaction microwell array. Such a DDV configuration allows full reconstitution of the prestored reagents and then generates a uniform concentration distribution of the reconstituted reagents across the entire reaction microwell array, which is favorable for achieving reliable and robust multiplex dPCR assays. We demonstrated the feasibility of this method by performing an eight-plex dPCR assay targeting the seven most common point mutations in Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogene homologue (KRAS) and a reference sequence (wild-type KRAS allele).

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