Abstract

In this study, a simple fluorescent detection of survival motor neuron gene (SMN) in diagnosis of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) based on nucleic acid amplification test and the poly-T luminescent copper nanoclusters (CuNCs) was established. SMA is a severely genetic diseases to cause infant death in clinical, and detection of SMN gene is a powerful tool for pre- and postnatal diagnosis of this disease. This study utilized the molecular inversion probe for recognition of nucleotide variant between SMN1 (c.840 C) and SMN2 (c.840 C > T) genes, and rolling circle amplification with a universal primer for production of poly-T single-strand DNA. Finally, the fluorescent CuNCs were formed on the poly-T single-strand DNA template with addition of CuSO4 and sodium ascorbate. The fluorescence of CuNCs was only detected in the samples with the presence of SMN1 gene controlling the disease of SMA. After optimization of experimental conditions, this highly efficient method was performed under 50 °C for DNA ligation temperature by using 2U Ampligase, 3 h for rolling circle amplification, and the formation of the CuNCs by mixing 500 μM Cu2+ and 4 mM sodium ascorbate. Additionally, this highly efficient method was successfully applied for 65 clinical DNA samples, including 4 SMA patients, 4 carriers and 57 wild individuals. This label-free detection strategy has the own potential to not only be a general method for detection of SMN1 gene in diagnosis of SMA disease, but also served as a tool for detection of other single nucleotide polymorphisms or nucleotide variants in genetic analysis through designing the different sensing probes.

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