Abstract

Isothermal DNA amplification, such as recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA), is well suited for point-of-care testing (POCT) as it does not require lengthy thermal cycling. By exploiting DNA amplification at low temperatures that do not denature heat-sensitive molecules such as proteins, we have developed a blocking RPA method to detect gene mutations and examine the epigenetic status of DNA. We found that both nucleic acid blockers and nuclease-dead clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) ribonucleoproteins suppress RPA reactions by blocking elongation by DNA polymerases in a sequence-specific manner. By examining these suppression events, we are able to discriminate single-nucleotide mutations in cancer cells and evaluate genome-editing events. Methyl-CpG binding proteins similarly inhibit elongation by DNA polymerases on CpG-methylated template DNA in our RPA reactions, allowing for the detection of methylated CpG islands. Thus, the use of heat-sensitive molecules such as proteins and ribonucleoprotein complexes as blockers in low-temperature isothermal DNA amplification reactions markedly expands the utility and application of these methods.

Highlights

  • Isothermal DNA amplification, such as recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA), is well suited for point-of-care testing (POCT) as it does not require lengthy thermal cycling

  • RPA in the absence of ORNs amplified a sequence across human KRAS codon 13 (Gly[13] or G13) and codon 12 (Gly[12] or G12) from genomic DNA extracted from 293T cells, which have two WT alleles of KRAS (Fig. 2c)

  • We refer to this method of blocking RPA as “ORN-interference RPA (ORNiRPA)”

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Summary

Introduction

Isothermal DNA amplification, such as recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA), is well suited for point-of-care testing (POCT) as it does not require lengthy thermal cycling. By exploiting DNA amplification at low temperatures that do not denature heat-sensitive molecules such as proteins, we have developed a blocking RPA method to detect gene mutations and examine the epigenetic status of DNA. We found that both nucleic acid blockers and nuclease-dead clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) ribonucleoproteins suppress RPA reactions by blocking elongation by DNA polymerases in a sequence-specific manner. By examining these suppression events, we are able to discriminate single-nucleotide mutations in cancer cells and evaluate genome-editing events. The use of heat-sensitive molecules such as proteins and ribonucleoprotein complexes as blockers in low-temperature isothermal DNA amplification reactions markedly expands the utility and application of these methods

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