Kerman Kagan, Saito Masato, Morita Yasutaka, Takamura Yuzuru, Ozsoz Mehmet, Tamiya Eiichi
School of Materials Science, Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, 1-1 Asahidai, Tatsunokuchi, Ishikawa 923-1292, Japan.
Anal Chem. 2004 Apr 1;76(7):1877-84. doi: 10.1021/ac0351872.
Rapidly increasing information about the human genome requires a fast and simple method for the detection of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). To date, the conventional SNP detection technologies have been unable to identify all possible SNPs and needed further development in cost, speed, and sensitivity. Here we describe a novel method to discriminate and code all possible combinations. SNPs were coded by monitoring the changes in the electrochemical signal of the monobase-modified colloidal gold (Au) nanoparticles. First, a chitosan layer was formed on the alkanethiol self-assembled monolayer-modified Au nanoparticle. The monobases were then attached onto the chitosan-coated Au nanoparticles through their 5' phosphate group via the formation of a phosphoramidate bond with the free amino groups of chitosan. The size of the surface-modified Au nanoparticle was found to be 8.46 +/- 1.53 nm by using atomic force microscopy. If there is a SNP in DNA and the mismatched bases are complementary to the monobase, Au nanoparticles accumulate on the electrode surface in the presence of DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment), thus resulting in a significant change in the Au oxide wave. In this report, monobase-modified Au nanoparticles show not only the presence of a SNP, but also identify which bases are involved within the pair. Especially, the identification of a transversion SNP, which contains a couple of the same pyrimidine or purine bases, is greatly simplified. A model study was performed by using a synthetic 21-base DNA probe related to tumor necrosis factor (TNF-alpha) along with its all possible mutant combinations. This versatile nanoparticle-based electrochemical protocol is a promising candidate for coding all mutational changes.
关于人类基因组的信息迅速增加,这就需要一种快速简便的单核苷酸多态性(SNP)检测方法。迄今为止,传统的SNP检测技术无法识别所有可能的SNP,在成本、速度和灵敏度方面需要进一步改进。在此,我们描述了一种区分和编码所有可能组合的新方法。通过监测单碱基修饰的胶体金(Au)纳米颗粒的电化学信号变化对SNP进行编码。首先,在烷硫醇自组装单层修饰的Au纳米颗粒上形成壳聚糖层。然后,单碱基通过其5'磷酸基团与壳聚糖的游离氨基形成磷酰胺键,附着在壳聚糖包覆的Au纳米颗粒上。通过原子力显微镜发现表面修饰的Au纳米颗粒尺寸为8.46±1.53nm。如果DNA中存在SNP且错配碱基与单碱基互补,则在DNA聚合酶I(克列诺片段)存在的情况下,Au纳米颗粒会积聚在电极表面,从而导致Au氧化物波发生显著变化。在本报告中,单碱基修饰的Au纳米颗粒不仅显示了SNP的存在,还能识别该碱基对中涉及哪些碱基。特别是,对包含一对相同嘧啶或嘌呤碱基的颠换SNP的识别大大简化。使用与肿瘤坏死因子(TNF-α)相关的合成21碱基DNA探针及其所有可能的突变组合进行了模型研究。这种基于纳米颗粒的通用电化学方法有望用于编码所有突变变化。