Abstract

Detection of epigenetic markers, including 5-methylcytosine, is crucial due to their role in gene expression regulation and due to the mounting evidence of aberrant DNA methylation patterns in cancer biogenesis. Single-molecule methods to date have primarily been focused on hypermethylation detection; however, many oncogenes are hypomethylated during cancer development, presenting an important unmet biosensing challenge. To this end, we have developed a labeling and single-molecule quantification method for multiple unmethylated cytosine-guanine dinucleotides (CpGs). Our method involves a single-step covalent coupling of DNA with synthetic cofactor analogues using DNA methyltransferases (MTases) followed by molecule-by-molecule electro-optical nanopore detection and quantification with single or multiple colors. This sensing method yields a calibrated scale to directly quantify the number of unmethylated CpGs in the target sequences of each DNA molecule. Importantly, our method can be used to analyze ∼10 kbp long double-stranded DNA while circumventing PCR amplification or bisulfite conversion. Expanding this technique to use two colors, as demonstrated here, would enable sensing of multiple DNA MTases through orthogonal labeling/sensing of unmethylated CpGs (or other epigenetic modifications) associated with specific recognition sites. Our proof-of-principle study may permit sequence-specific, direct targeting of clinically relevant hypomethylated sites in the genome.

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