Abstract

Many strategies for the detection of nucleic acid sequence rely upon Watson-Crick hybridization of a probe strand to the target strand, but the reversible nature of nucleic acid hybridization presents an inherent challenge: short probes that provide high target specificity have relatively low target affinity resulting in signal losses. Sequence-specific covalent cross-linking reactions have the potential to provide both selective target capture and durable signal. We explore a novel approach involving sequence-specific covalent cross-linking of a probe to target DNA combined with single-molecule nanopore detection of the cross-linked DNA. Here, we exploited the selective reaction of mechlorethamine at a C-C mismatch for covalent capture of a target DNA sequence corresponding to a cancer-driving mutation at position 1799 of the human BRAF kinase gene. We then demonstrated that the α-hemolysin protein nanopore can be employed for the unambiguous, single-molecule detection of the cross-linked probe-target complex. Cross-linked DNA generates an unmistakable deep and persistent current block (≥5 s) that is easily distinguished from the microsecond and millisecond blocks generated by translocation of single-stranded DNA and uncross-linked duplexes through the nanopore.

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