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Isothermal digital detection of microRNAs using background-free molecular circuit
Author(s) -
Guillaume Gines,
Roberta Menezes,
Kaori Nara,
Anne-Sophie Kirstetter,
Valérie Taly,
Yannick Rondelez
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aay5952
Subject(s) - loop mediated isothermal amplification , microrna , computational biology , digital polymerase chain reaction , chemistry , isothermal process , dna , nanotechnology , polymerase chain reaction , biophysics , biological system , computer science , gene , biology , materials science , biochemistry , physics , thermodynamics
MicroRNAs, a class of transcripts involved in the regulation of gene expression, are emerging as promising disease-specific biomarkers accessible from tissues or bodily fluids. However, their accurate quantification from biological samples remains challenging. We report a sensitive and quantitative microRNA detection method using an isothermal amplification chemistry adapted to a droplet digital readout. Building on molecular programming concepts, we design a DNA circuit that converts, thresholds, amplifies, and reports the presence of a specific microRNA, down to the femtomolar concentration. Using a leak absorption mechanism, we were able to suppress nonspecific amplification, classically encountered in other exponential amplification reactions. As a result, we demonstrate that this isothermal amplification scheme is adapted to digital counting of microRNAs: By partitioning the reaction mixture into water-in-oil droplets, resulting in single microRNA encapsulation and amplification, the method provides absolute target quantification. The modularity of our approach enables to repurpose the assay for various microRNA sequences.

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