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Nonequilibrium Hybridization Enables Discrimination of a Point Mutation within 5-40 °C.


ABSTRACT: Detection of point mutations and single nucleotide polymorphisms in DNA and RNA has a growing importance in biology, biotechnology, and medicine. For the application at hand, hybridization assays are often used. Traditionally, they differentiate point mutations only at elevated temperatures (>40 °C) and in narrow intervals (?T = 1-10 °C). The current study demonstrates that a specially designed multistranded DNA probe can differentiate point mutations in the range of 5-40 °C. This unprecedentedly broad ambient-temperature range is enabled by a controlled combination of (i) nonequilibrium hybridization conditions and (ii) a mismatch-induced increase of equilibration time in respect to that of a fully matched complex, which we dub "kinetic inversion".

SUBMITTER: Stancescu M 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5645261 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Nonequilibrium Hybridization Enables Discrimination of a Point Mutation within 5-40 °C.

Stancescu Maria M   Fedotova Tatiana A TA   Hooyberghs Jef J   Balaeff Alexander A   Kolpashchikov Dmitry M DM  

Journal of the American Chemical Society 20161004 41


Detection of point mutations and single nucleotide polymorphisms in DNA and RNA has a growing importance in biology, biotechnology, and medicine. For the application at hand, hybridization assays are often used. Traditionally, they differentiate point mutations only at elevated temperatures (>40 °C) and in narrow intervals (ΔT = 1-10 °C). The current study demonstrates that a specially designed multistranded DNA probe can differentiate point mutations in the range of 5-40 °C. This unprecedentedl  ...[more]

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