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1.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 19790, 2020 11 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33188229

RESUMO

Nanopores can serve as single molecule sensors. We exploited the MinION, a portable nanopore device from Oxford Nanopore Technologies, and repurposed it to detect any DNA/RNA oligo (target) in a complex mixture by conducting voltage-driven ion-channel measurements. The detection and quantitation of the target is enabled by the use of a unique complementary probe. Using a validated labeling technology, probes are tagged with a bulky Osmium tag (Osmium tetroxide 2,2'-bipyridine), in a way that preserves strong hybridization between probe and target. Intact oligos traverse the MinION's nanopore relatively quickly compared to the device's acquisition rate, and exhibit count of events comparable to the baseline. Counts are reported by a publicly available software, OsBp_detect. Due to the presence of the bulky Osmium tag, probes traverse more slowly, produce multiple counts over the baseline, and are even detected at single digit attomole (amole) range. In the presence of the target the probe is "silenced". Silencing is attributed to a 1:1 double stranded (ds) complex that does not fit and cannot traverse this nanopore. This ready-to-use platform can be tailored as a diagnostic test to meet the requirements for point-of-care cell-free tumor DNA (ctDNA) and microRNA (miRNA) detection and quantitation in body fluids.


Assuntos
DNA/química , Nanoporos , Testes Diagnósticos de Rotina , MicroRNAs/química , Nanotecnologia/métodos , Osmio/química , Análise de Sequência de DNA/métodos
2.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 14180, 2019 Oct 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31578367

RESUMO

Protein and solid-state nanopores are used for DNA/RNA sequencing as well as for single molecule analysis. We proposed that selective labeling/tagging may improve base-to-base resolution of nucleic acids via nanopores. We have explored one specific tag, the Osmium tetroxide 2,2'-bipyridine (OsBp), which conjugates to pyrimidines and leaves purines intact. Earlier reports using OsBp-tagged oligodeoxyribonucleotides demonstrated proof-of-principle during unassisted voltage-driven translocation via either alpha-Hemolysin or a solid-state nanopore. Here we extend this work to RNA oligos and a third nanopore by employing the MinION, a commercially available device from Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT). Conductance measurements demonstrate that the MinION visibly discriminates oligoriboadenylates with sequence A15PyA15, where Py is an OsBp-tagged pyrimidine. Such resolution rivals traditional chromatography, suggesting that nanopore devices could be exploited for the characterization of RNA oligos and microRNAs enhanced by selective labeling. The data also reveal marked discrimination between a single pyrimidine and two consecutive pyrimidines in OsBp-tagged AnPyAn and AnPyPyAn. This observation leads to the conjecture that the MinION/OsBp platform senses a 2-nucleotide sequence, in contrast to the reported 5-nucleotide sequence with native nucleic acids. Such improvement in sensing, enabled by the presence of OsBp, may enhance base-calling accuracy in enzyme-assisted DNA/RNA sequencing.


Assuntos
2,2'-Dipiridil/análogos & derivados , Impressões Digitais de DNA/métodos , MicroRNAs/química , Nanoporos , Oligorribonucleotídeos/química , Compostos Organometálicos/química , 2,2'-Dipiridil/química , Impressões Digitais de DNA/instrumentação , MicroRNAs/genética , Oligorribonucleotídeos/genética , Pirimidinas/química
3.
Sci Rep ; 9(1): 1019, 2019 01 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30705318

RESUMO

Synthetic RNA oligos exhibit purity decreasing as a function of length, because the efficiency of the total synthesis is the numerical product of the individual step efficiencies, typically below 98%. Analytical methods for RNAs up to the 60 nucleotides (nt) have been reported, but they fall short for purity evaluation of 100nt long, used as single guide RNA (sgRNA) in CRISPR technology, and promoted as pharmaceuticals. In an attempt to exploit a single HPLC method and obtain both identity as well as purity, ion-pair reversed-phase chromatography (IP-RP) at high temperature in the presence of an organic cosolvent is the current analytical strategy. Here we report that IP-RP is less suitable compared to the conventional ion-exchange (IEX) for analysis of 100nt RNAs. We demonstrate the relative stability of RNA in the denaturing/basic IEX mobile phase, lay out a protocol to determine the on-the-column stability of any RNA, and establish the applicability of this method for quality testing of sgRNA, tRNA, and mRNA. Unless well resolving HPLC methods are used for batch-to-batch evaluation of man-made RNAs, process development will remain shortsighted, and observed off-target effects in-vitro or in-vivo may be partially related to low purity and the presence of shorter sequences.


Assuntos
Cromatografia Líquida de Alta Pressão/métodos , RNA/análise , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico , Desnaturação de Ácido Nucleico , RNA/química , Estabilidade de RNA , RNA Guia de Cinetoplastídeos/análise , RNA Guia de Cinetoplastídeos/química , RNA Mensageiro/análise , RNA Mensageiro/química , RNA de Transferência/análise , RNA de Transferência/química
4.
Beilstein J Nanotechnol ; 7: 1434-1446, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27826518

RESUMO

Osmium tetroxide 2,2'-bipyridine (OsBp) is known to react with pyrimidines in ssDNA and preferentially label deoxythymine (T) over deoxycytosine (C). The product, osmylated DNA, was proposed as a surrogate for nanopore-based DNA sequencing due to OsBp's "perfect" label attributes. Osmylated deoxyoligos translocate unassisted and measurably slow via sub-2 nm SiN solid-state nanopores, as well as via the alpha-hemolysin (α-HL) pore. Both nanopores discriminate clearly between osmylated and intact nucleobase; α-HL was also shown to discriminate between osmylated T and osmylated C. Experiments presented here confirm that the kinetics of osmylation are comparable for short oligos and long ssDNA and show that pyrimidine osmylation is practically complete in two hours at room temperature with less than 15 mM OsBp. Under the proposed labeling conditions: deoxyoligo backbone degradation measures less than 1/1,000,000; false positives such as osmylated deoxyadenine (A) and osmylated deoxyguanine (G) measure less than 1/100,000; false negatives, i.e., unosmylated C measure less than 1/10,000; and unosmylated T must measure substantially lower than 1/10,000 due to the 27-fold higher reactivity of T compared to C. However, osmylated C undergoes degradation that amounts to about 1-2% for the duration of the labeling protocol. This degradation may be further characterized, possibly suppressed, and the properties of the degradation products via nanopore translocation can be evaluated to assure base calling quality in a DNA sequencing effort.

5.
Beilstein J Nanotechnol ; 7: 91-101, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26925357

RESUMO

The influence of an electric field on an isolated channel or nanopore separating two compartments filled with electrolytes produces a constant ion flux through the pore. Nucleic acids added to one compartment traverse the pore, and modulate the current in a sequence-dependent manner. While translocation is faster than detection, the α-hemolysin nanopore (α-HL) successfully senses base modifications in ssDNA immobilized within the pore. With the assistance of a processing enzyme to slow down translocation, nanopore-based DNA sequencing is now a commercially available platform. However, accurate base calling is challenging because α-HL senses a sequence, and not a single nucleotide. Osmylated DNA was recently proposed as a surrogate for nanopore-based sequencing. Osmylation is the addition of osmium tetroxide 2,2'-bipyridine (OsBp) to the C5-C6 pyrimidine double bond. The process is simple, selective for deoxythymidine (dT) over deoxycytidine (dC), unreactive towards the purines, practically 100% effective, and strikingly independent of length, sequence, and composition. Translocation of an oligodeoxynucleotide (oligo) dA10XdA9 via α-HL is relatively slow, and exhibits distinct duration as well as distinct residual current when X = dA, dT(OsBp), or dC(OsBp). The data indicate that the α-HL constriction zone/ß-barrel interacts strongly with both OsBp and the base. A 23 nucleotide long oligo with four dT(OsBp) traverses 18-times slower, and the same oligo with nine (dT+dC)(OsBp) moieties traverses 84-times slower compared to dA20, suggesting an average rate of 40 or 180 µs/base, respectively. These translocation speeds are well above detection limits, may be further optimized, and clear the way for nanopore-based sequencing using osmylated DNA.

6.
PLoS One ; 10(12): e0142155, 2015.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26657869

RESUMO

Nanopores are a promising platform in next generation DNA sequencing. In this platform, an individual DNA strand is threaded into nanopore using an electric field, and enzyme-based ratcheting is used to move the strand through the detector. During this process the residual ion current through the pore is measured, which exhibits unique levels for different base combinations inside the pore. While this approach has shown great promise, accuracy is not optimal because the four bases are chemically comparable to one another, leading to small differences in current obstruction. Nucleobase-specific chemical tagging can be a viable approach to enhancing the contrast between different bases in the sequence. Herein we show that covalent modification of one or both of the pyrimidine bases by an osmium bipyridine complex leads to measureable differences in the blockade amplitudes of DNA molecules. We qualitatively determine the degree of osmylation of a DNA strand by passing it through a solid-state nanopore, and are thus able to gauge T and C base content. In addition, we show that osmium bipyridine reacts with dsDNA, leading to substantially different current blockade levels than exhibited for bare dsDNA. This work serves as a proof of principle for nanopore sequencing and mapping via base-specific DNA osmylation.


Assuntos
Citosina/química , DNA/análise , Sequenciamento de Nucleotídeos em Larga Escala/métodos , Osmio/química , Análise de Sequência de DNA/métodos , Timina/química , 2,2'-Dipiridil/química , DNA/química , Eletricidade , Nanoporos , Oligonucleotídeos/química , Coloração e Rotulagem/métodos
7.
Nanotechnology ; 26(13): 134003, 2015 Mar 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25760070

RESUMO

Saenger sequencing has led the advances in molecular biology, while faster and cheaper next generation technologies are urgently needed. A newer approach exploits nanopores, natural or solid-state, set in an electrical field, and obtains base sequence information from current variations due to the passage of a ssDNA molecule through the pore. A hurdle in this approach is the fact that the four bases are chemically comparable to each other which leads to small differences in current obstruction. 'Base calling' becomes even more challenging because most nanopores sense a short sequence and not individual bases. Perhaps sequencing DNA via nanopores would be more manageable, if only the bases were two, and chemically very different from each other; a sequence of 1s and 0s comes to mind. Osmylated DNA comes close to such a sequence of 1s and 0s. Osmylation is the addition of osmium tetroxide bipyridine across the C5-C6 double bond of the pyrimidines. Osmylation adds almost 400% mass to the reactive base, creates a sterically and electronically notably different molecule, labeled 1, compared to the unreactive purines, labeled 0. If osmylated DNA were successfully sequenced, the result would be a sequence of osmylated pyrimidines (1), and purines (0), and not of the actual nucleobases. To solve this problem we studied the osmylation reaction with short oligos and with M13mp18, a long ssDNA, developed a UV-vis assay to measure extent of osmylation, and designed two protocols. Protocol A uses mild conditions and yields osmylated thymidines (1), while leaving the other three bases (0) practically intact. Protocol B uses harsher conditions and effectively osmylates both pyrimidines, but not the purines. Applying these two protocols also to the complementary of the target polynucleotide yields a total of four osmylated strands that collectively could define the actual base sequence of the target DNA.


Assuntos
Nanoporos , Nanotecnologia/métodos , Análise de Sequência de DNA/métodos , DNA de Cadeia Simples/química
8.
Electrophoresis ; 33(23): 3529-43, 2012 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23147698

RESUMO

With the recent advances in electron microscopy (EM), computation, and nanofabrication, the original idea of reading DNA sequence directly from an image can now be tested. One approach is to develop heavy atom labels that can provide the contrast required for EM imaging. While evaluating tentative labels for the respective nucleobases in synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides (oligos), we developed a streamlined CE protocol to assess the label stability, reactivity, and selectivity. We report our protocol using osmium tetroxide 2,2'-bipyridine (Osbipy) as a thymidine (T) specific label. The observed rates show that the labeling process is kinetically independent of both the oligo length, and the base composition. The conditions, i.e. temperature, optimal Osbipy concentration, and molar ratio of reagents, to promote 100% conversion of the starting oligo to labeled product were established. Hence, the optimized conditions developed with the oligos could be leveraged to allow osmylation of effectively all Ts in ssDNA, while achieving minimal mislabeling. In addition, the approach and methods employed here may be adapted to the evaluation of other prospective contrasting agents/labels to facilitate next-generation DNA sequencing by EM.


Assuntos
Eletroforese Capilar/métodos , Oligodesoxirribonucleotídeos/química , Cinética , Modelos Lineares , Ressonância Magnética Nuclear Biomolecular , Oligodesoxirribonucleotídeos/isolamento & purificação , Oligodesoxirribonucleotídeos/metabolismo , Compostos Organometálicos/química , Piridinas/química , Espectrometria de Massas por Ionização e Dessorção a Laser Assistida por Matriz , Temperatura , Timidina/química
9.
J Am Chem Soc ; 125(45): 13734-40, 2003 Nov 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14599212

RESUMO

The RNA world hypothesis requires a plausible mechanism by which RNA itself (or precursor RNA-like polymers) can be synthesized nonenzymatically from the corresponding building blocks. Simulation experiments have exploited chemically reactive mononucleotides as monomers. Solutions of such monomers in the prebiotic environment were likely to be very dilute, but in experimental simulations of polymerization reactions dilute solutions of activated mononucleotides in the millimolar range hydrolyze extensively, and only trace amounts of dimers and trimers are formed. We report here that random medium-size RNA analogues with mixed sequences (5- to 17-mers with traces of longer products) can be synthesized in ice eutectic phases that are produced when dilute solutions of activated monomers and catalysts (Mg(II) and Pb(II)) are frozen and maintained at -18 degrees C for periods up to 38 days. Under these conditions, the monomers are concentrated as eutectics in an ice matrix. Hydrolysis of the activated mononucleotides was suppressed at low-temperature ranges, and polymerization was enhanced with yields up to 90%. Analysis of the mixed oligomers established that incorporation of both purine and pyrimidine bases proceeded at comparable rates and yields. These results suggest that ice deposits on the early Earth could have facilitated the synthesis of short- and medium-size random sequence RNA analogues and thereby provided a microenvironment suitable for the formation of biopolymers or their precursors.


Assuntos
Purinas/química , Pirimidinas/química , RNA/química , Ribonucleotídeos/química , Purinas/metabolismo , Pirimidinas/metabolismo , RNA/metabolismo , Ribonuclease T1/química , Ribonuclease T1/metabolismo , Ribonuclease Pancreático/química , Ribonuclease Pancreático/metabolismo , Ribonucleotídeos/metabolismo
10.
Astrobiology ; 2(2): 139-52, 2002.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12469365

RESUMO

A commonly accepted view is that life began in a marine environment, which would imply the presence of inorganic ions such as Na+, Cl-, Mg2+, Ca2+, and Fe2+. We have investigated two processes relevant to the origin of life--membrane self-assembly and RNA polymerization--and established that both are adversely affected by ionic solute concentrations much lower than those of contemporary oceans. In particular, monocarboxylic acid vesicles, which are plausible models of primitive membrane systems, are completely disrupted by low concentrations of divalent cations, such as magnesium and calcium, and by high sodium chloride concentrations as well. Similarly, a nonenzymatic, nontemplated polymerization of activated RNA monomers in ice/eutectic phases (in a solution of low initial ionic strength) yields oligomers with > 80% of the original monomers incorporated, but polymerization in initially higher ionic strength aqueous solutions is markedly inhibited. These observations suggest that cellular life may not have begun in a marine environment because the abundance of ionic inorganic solutes would have significantly inhibited the chemical and physical processes that lead to self-assembly of more complex molecular systems.


Assuntos
Compostos Inorgânicos , Origem da Vida , Água , Cálcio , Cloretos , Ácidos Graxos não Esterificados , Ferro , Magnésio , Membranas Artificiais , Polímeros , Sais , Sódio , Soluções
11.
J Org Chem ; 64(22): 8323-8333, 1999 Oct 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11674755

RESUMO

Polycytidylate, poly(C), serves as a scaffold or template to direct and catalyze the synthesis of long oligoguanylates from guanosine 5'-phosphate 2-methylimidazolide, 2-MeImpG. In the absence of poly(C), small amounts of three isomeric dimers, i.e., the 2'-5'-, the 3'-5'-, and the pyrophosphate-linked, are formed slowly. In the presence of poly(C) oligomers that are primarily 3'-5'-linked are formed quickly and in high yield. Product analysis suggests that the oligomers are elongation products of the 3'-5'-linked dimer, abbreviated D. Assuming that D is formed slowly from two molecules of 2-MeImpG (Scheme 1) and elongates relatively fast, the initial rate of dimerization, d[D]/dt in M h(-1), was determined using two independent methods. The first method is based on the approximation that at the onset of the reaction the substrate is consumed only via hydrolysis and dimerization, and thus elongation can be neglected. The second, more accurate, method exploits the assertion that every oligomer was once a 3'-5'-linked dimer. Hence the concentration of D was obtained indirectly from the concentration of the oligomer products. These two methods gave comparable results. Experiments were run in aqueous solution in the presence of 1.0 M NaCl, 0.2 M MgCl(2) at pH 7.9 +/- 0.1 and 23 degrees C. Controls were run in the absence of poly(C) and in the presence of other polynucleotides. The kinetics were determined as a function of both monomer and polymer concentration the latter expressed in C equivalents. The kinetic data obtained in the presence of poly(C) confirmed an earlier conclusion regarding the remarkable effect of poly(C) on the formation of the 3'-5'-linked diguanylate. Initial dimerization rates were quantitatively correlated using a simple template-directed (TD) model that presumes cooperative binding (two association constants) of 2-MeImpG on poly(C) and reaction between adjacent template-bound molecules. The model allows for the estimation of the association constants and the intrinsic rate constant of dimerization, k(2). Insights into the detailed mechanism are also gained from this analysis. The fact that the proposed model can successfully correlate kinetic data that vary by more than 5000-fold between the slowest and the fastest reaction adds confidence and suggests the suitability of this model for describing TD reactions in general. It is anticipated that similar analysis of other known TD reactions may lead to clues that will facilitate the design of more efficient polynucleotide-synthesizing systems.

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