Combinatorial Probes for High-Throughput Electrochemical Analysis of Circulating Nucleic Acids in Clinical Samples.
Jagotamoy DasIvaylo IvanovTina S SafaeiEdward H SargentShana O KelleyPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2018)
The analysis of circulating tumour nucleic acids (ctNAs) provides a minimally invasive way to assess the mutational spectrum of a tumour. However, effective and practical methods for analyzing this emerging class of markers are lacking. Analysis of ctNAs using a sensor-based approach has notable challenges, as it is vital to differentiate nucleic acids from normal cells from mutation-bearing sequences emerging from tumours. Moreover, many genes related to cancer have dozens of different mutations. Herein, we report an electrochemical approach that directly detects genes with mutations in patient serum by using combinatorial probes (CPs). The CPs enable detection of all of the mutant alleles derived from the same part of the gene. As a proof of concept, we analyze mutations of the EGFR gene, which has more than 40 clinically relevant alterations that include deletions, insertions, and point mutations. Our CP-based approach accurately detects mutant sequences directly in patient serum.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- genome wide identification
- high throughput
- minimally invasive
- gold nanoparticles
- small molecule
- label free
- small cell lung cancer
- case report
- copy number
- genome wide analysis
- ionic liquid
- living cells
- papillary thyroid
- transcription factor
- tyrosine kinase
- high resolution
- wild type
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- young adults
- bioinformatics analysis
- mass spectrometry