Login / Signup

A DNA circuit that records molecular events.

Mingzhi ZhangColin YanceyChao ZhangJunyan WangQian MaLinlin YangRebecca SchulmanDa HanWeihong Tan
Published in: Science advances (2024)
Characterizing the relative onset time, strength, and duration of molecular signals is critical for understanding the operation of signal transduction and genetic regulatory networks. However, detecting multiple such molecules as they are produced and then quickly consumed is challenging. A MER can encode information about transient molecular events as stable DNA sequences and are amenable to downstream sequencing or other analysis. Here, we report the development of a de novo molecular event recorder that processes information using a strand displacement reaction network and encodes the information using the primer exchange reaction, which can be decoded and quantified by DNA sequencing. The event recorder was able to classify the order at which different molecular signals appeared in time with 88% accuracy, the concentrations with 100% accuracy, and the duration with 75% accuracy. This simultaneous and highly programmable multiparameter recording could enable the large-scale deciphering of molecular events such as within dynamic reaction environments, living cells, or tissues.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • living cells
  • circulating tumor
  • gene expression
  • single cell
  • cell free
  • transcription factor
  • fluorescent probe
  • nucleic acid
  • circulating tumor cells
  • blood brain barrier
  • flow cytometry
  • data analysis