Abstract

We report a novel method based on the current blockade (CB) characteristics obtained from a dual nanopore device that can determine DNA barcodes with near-perfect accuracy using a Brownian dynamics simulation strategy. The method supersedes our previously reported velocity correction algorithm (S. Seth and A. Bhattacharya, RSC Advances, 11:20781-20787, 2021), taking advantage of the better measurement of the time-of-flight (TOF) protocol offered by the dual nanopore setup. We demonstrate the efficacy of the method by comparing our simulation data from a coarse-grained model of a polymer chain consisting of 2048 excluded volume beads of diameter 𝜎 = 24bp using with those obtained from experimental CB data from a 48,500bp λ-phage DNA, providing a base pair resolution in simulation. The simulation time scale is compared to the experimental time scale by matching the simulated time-of-flight (TOF) velocity distributions with those obtained experimentally (Rand et al., ACS Nano, 16:5258-5273, 2022). We then use the evolving coordinates of the dsDNA and the molecular features to reconstruct the current blockade characteristics on the fly using a volumetric model based on the effective van der Waal radii of the species inside and in the immediate vicinity of the pore. Our BD simulation mimics the control-zoom-in-logic to understand the origin of the TOF distributions due to the relaxation of the out-of-equilibrium conformations followed by a reversal of the electric fields. The simulation algorithm is quite general and can be applied to differentiate DNA barcodes from different species.

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