Mutation enrichment in human DNA samples via UV-mediated cross-linking.
Ka Wai LeongFangyan YuG Mike MakrigiorgosPublished in: Nucleic acids research (2022)
Detection of low-level DNA mutations can reveal recurrent, hotspot genetic changes of clinical relevance to cancer, prenatal diagnostics, organ transplantation or infectious diseases. However, the high excess of wild-type (WT) alleles, which are concurrently present, often hinders identification of salient genetic changes. Here, we introduce UV-mediated cross-linking minor allele enrichment (UVME), a novel approach that incorporates ultraviolet irradiation (∼365 nm UV) DNA cross-linking either before or during PCR amplification. Oligonucleotide probes matching the WT target sequence and incorporating a UV-sensitive 3-cyanovinylcarbazole nucleoside modification are employed for cross-linking WT DNA. Mismatches formed with mutated alleles reduce DNA binding and UV-mediated cross-linking and favor mutated DNA amplification. UV can be applied before PCR and/or at any stage during PCR to selectively block WT DNA amplification and enable identification of traces of mutated alleles. This enables a single-tube PCR reaction directly from genomic DNA combining optimal pre-amplification of mutated alleles, which then switches to UV-mediated mutation enrichment-based DNA target amplification. UVME cross-linking enables enrichment of mutated KRAS and p53 alleles, which can be screened directly via Sanger sequencing, high-resolution melting, TaqMan genotyping or digital PCR, resulting in the detection of mutation allelic frequencies of 0.001-0.1% depending on the endpoint detection method. UV-mediated mutation enrichment provides new potential for mutation enrichment in diverse clinical samples.
Keyphrases
- nucleic acid
- circulating tumor
- cell free
- single molecule
- wild type
- real time pcr
- high resolution
- label free
- dna binding
- infectious diseases
- aqueous solution
- squamous cell carcinoma
- endothelial cells
- dna methylation
- stem cells
- circulating tumor cells
- gene expression
- copy number
- radiation therapy
- mesenchymal stem cells
- mass spectrometry
- single cell
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- transcription factor
- genetic diversity
- squamous cell