Abstract

Detection and identification of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have garnered increasing interest in the past decade, finding potential application in detection of antibiotic resistance, advanced forensic science, as well as clinical diagnostics and prognostics, moving toward the realization of personalized medicine. Many different techniques have been developed for genotyping SNPs, and ideally these techniques should be rapid, easy-to-use, cost-effective, flexible, scalable, easily automated, and requiring minimal end-user intervention. While high-resolution melting curve analysis has been widely used for the detection of SNPs, fluorescence detection does not meet many of the desired requirements, and electrochemical detection is an attractive alternative due to its high sensitivity, simplicity, cost-effectiveness, and compatibility with microfabrication. Herein, we describe the multiplexed electrochemical melting curve analysis of duplex surfaces tethered to electrodes of an array. In this approach, thiolated probes designed to hybridize to a DNA sequence containing the SNP to be interrogated are immobilized on gold electrodes. Asymmetric PCR using a ferrocene-labeled forward primer is used to generate this single-stranded redox-labeled PCR amplicon. Following hybridization with the probe immobilized on the electrode surface, the electrode array is exposed to a controlled ramping of temperature, with concomitant constant washing of the electrode array surface while simultaneously carrying out voltammetric measurements. The optimum position of the site complementary to the SNP site in the immobilized probe to achieve maximum differentiation in melting temperature between wild-type and single base mismatch, thus facilitating allelic discrimination, was determined and applied to the detection of a cardiomyopathy associated SNP.

Highlights

  • A person hosts millions of variations in their gene coding regions, and the most common variations are due to single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)

  • One possible explanation for this is that the simulation was made with a step response of 1 V, the highest voltage change made by the pulse width modulation (PWM) in order to increase the block temperature by 1 °C is 24.41 mV

  • This means that the input shift might not be that strong to produce such a response on the controller

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Summary

Introduction

As an increasing number of SNPs are identified using nextgeneration sequencing technologies, a battery of genotyping technologies for the detection of SNPs, including primer extension, ligation, enzymatic cleavage, mass spectroscopy, and conformational analysis, among others, have emerged.[4,5] many of these approaches are expensive and laborintensive and often require considerable infrastructure and instrumentation

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