Extended Enrichment for Ultrasensitive Detection of Low-Frequency Mutations by Long Blocker Displacement Amplification.
Yunpei SiXiawen WangXinglei SuZhi WengQiongzheng HuQian LiChunhai FanDavid Yu ZhangYunshan WangShihua LuoPing SongPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2024)
Detecting low-frequency DNA mutations hotspots cluster is critical for cancer diagnosis but remains challenging. Quantitative PCR (qPCR) is constrained by sensitivity, and allele-specific PCR is restricted by throughput. Here we develop a long blocker displacement amplification (LBDA) coupled with qPCR for ultrasensitive and multiplexed variants detection. By designing long blocker oligos to perfectly match wildtype sequences while mispairing with mutants, long blockers enable 14-44 nt enrichment regions which is 2-fold longer than normal BDA in the experiments. For wild template with a specific nucleotide, LBDA can detect different mutation types down to 0.5 % variant allele frequency (VAF) in one reaction, with median enrichment fold of 1,000 on 21 mutant DNA templates compared to the wild type. We applied LBDA-qPCR to detect KRAS and NRAS mutation hotspots, utilizing a single plex assay capable of covering 81 mutations and tested in synthetic templates and colorectal cancer tissue samples. Moreover, the mutation types were verified through Sanger sequencing, demonstrating concordance with results obtained from next generation sequencing. Overall, LBDA-qPCR provides a simple yet ultrasensitive approach for multiplexed detection of low VAF mutations hotspots, presenting a powerful tool for cancer diagnosis and monitoring.
Keyphrases
- wild type
- label free
- real time pcr
- circulating tumor
- papillary thyroid
- angiotensin converting enzyme
- gold nanoparticles
- nucleic acid
- single cell
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- quantum dots
- molecularly imprinted
- copy number
- cell free
- single molecule
- squamous cell
- angiotensin ii
- lymph node metastasis
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- young adults
- mass spectrometry
- case report