Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Southern Illinois University, 1245 Lincoln Dr, Carbondale, IL, 62901, USA.
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Carbondale, IL, 62901, USA.
Anal Bioanal Chem. 2019 Oct;411(26):6995-7003. doi: 10.1007/s00216-019-02075-8. Epub 2019 Aug 21.
DNA repeat expansion sequences cause a myriad of neurological diseases when they expand beyond a critical threshold. Previous electrochemical approaches focused on the detection of trinucleotide repeats (CAG, CGG, and GAA) and relied on labeling of the probe and/or target strands or enzyme-linked assays. However, detection of expanded GC-rich sequences is challenging because they are prone to forming secondary structures such as cruciforms and quadruplexes. Here, we present label-free detection of hexanucleotide GGGGCC repeat sequences, which cause the leading genetic form of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The approach relies on capturing targets by surface-bound oligonucleotide probes with a different number of complementary repeats, which proportionately translates the length of the target strands into charge transfer resistance (R) signal measured by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy. The probe carrying three tandem repeats transduces the number of repeats into R with a 3× higher calibration sensitivity and detection limit. Chronocoulometric measurements show a decrease in surface density with increasing repeat length, which is opposite of the impedance trend. This implies that the length of the target itself can contribute to amplification of the impedance signal independent of the surface density. Moreover, the probe can distinguish between a control and patient sequences while remaining insensitive to non-specific Huntington's disease (CAG) repeats in the presence of a complementary target. This label-free strategy might be applied to detect the length of other neurodegenerative repeat sequences using short probes with a few complementary repeats. Graphical abstract Short oligomeric probes with multiple complementary repeats detect long neurodegenerative targets with high sensitivity and transduce into higher impedance signal.
当 DNA 重复扩展序列扩展到临界阈值以上时,会导致许多神经退行性疾病。以前的电化学方法主要集中在检测三核苷酸重复(CAG、CGG 和 GAA),并依赖于探针和/或靶链的标记或酶联测定。然而,扩展的富含 GC 的序列的检测具有挑战性,因为它们容易形成二级结构,如十字形和四链体。在这里,我们提出了对六核苷酸 GGGGCC 重复序列的无标记检测,这些序列导致额颞叶痴呆(FTD)和肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)的主要遗传形式。该方法依赖于通过具有不同数量互补重复的表面结合寡核苷酸探针捕获靶标,这将靶链的长度按比例转换为通过电化学阻抗谱测量的电荷转移电阻(R)信号。携带三个串联重复的探针将重复次数转换为 R,校准灵敏度和检测限提高了 3 倍。计时库仑测量显示表面密度随重复长度的增加而降低,这与阻抗趋势相反。这意味着目标本身的长度可以独立于表面密度来增强阻抗信号。此外,该探针可以区分对照和患者序列,而在存在互补靶标的情况下对非特异性亨廷顿病(CAG)重复保持不敏感。这种无标记策略可以应用于使用具有几个互补重复的短探针来检测其他神经退行性重复序列的长度。