Abstract

Nanopore DNA sequencing is limited by low base calling accuracy. Improved base-calling accuracy has so far relied on specialized base-calling algorithms, different nanopores and motor enzymes, or biochemical methods to re-read DNA molecules. Two primary error modes hamper sequencing accuracy: enzyme mis-steps and sequences with indistinguishable signals. We vary the driving voltage across an MspA nanopore between 100 to 200 mV with a frequency of 200 Hz, changing how the DNA strand moves through the nanopore. As a DNA helicase moves the DNA through the nanopore in discrete steps, the variable voltage positions the DNA continuously between these steps. The resulting electronic signal can be analysed to overcome the primary error modes in base-calling. Single-passage de novo base-calling accuracy in our device increases from 62.7 ± 0.5% with a constant driving voltage to 79.3 ± 0.3% with a variable driving voltage. Our variable-voltage sequencing mode is complementary to other advances in nanopore sequencing and is amenable to incorporation into other enzyme-actuated nanopore sequencing devices.

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