Guiding-Strand-Controlled DNA Nucleases with Enhanced Specificity and Tunable Kinetics for DNA Mutation Detection.
Zhihao MingWei ZhangMeng LinXiaofeng TangNa ChenNa LiuXiaoyan XinHongbo WangWenpei XiangXianjin XiaoPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2021)
Nucleases are powerful tools in various biomedical applications, such as genetic engineering, biosensing, and molecular diagnosis. However, the commonly used nucleases (endonuclease IV, apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease-1, and λ exonuclease) are prone to the nonspecific cleavage of single-stranded DNA, making the desired reactions extremely low-yield and unpredictable. Herein, we have developed guiding-strand-controlled nuclease systems and constructed theoretical kinetic models to explain their mechanisms of action. The models displayed excellent agreement with the experimental results, making the kinetics highly predictable and tunable. Our method inhibited the nonspecific cleavage of single-stranded probes while maintaining highly efficient cleavage of double-stranded DNA. We also demonstrated the clinical practicability of the method by detecting a low-frequency mutation in a genomic DNA sample extracted from the blood of a patient with cancer. The limit of detection could be 0.01% for PTEN rs121909219. We believe that our findings provide a powerful tool for the field and the established model provides us a deeper understanding of the enzymatic activities of DNA nucleases.
Keyphrases
- circulating tumor
- single molecule
- cell free
- nucleic acid
- highly efficient
- genome editing
- dna binding
- crispr cas
- circulating tumor cells
- dna methylation
- oxidative stress
- dna repair
- copy number
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- living cells
- nitric oxide
- signaling pathway
- photodynamic therapy
- structural basis
- squamous cell