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Novel Bioluminescent Quantitative Detection of Nucleic Acid Amplification in Real-Time

BACKGROUND: The real-time monitoring of polynucleotide amplification is at the core of most molecular assays. This conventionally relies on fluorescent detection of the amplicon produced, requiring complex and costly hardware, often restricting it to specialised laboratories. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Her...

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Autores principales: Gandelman, Olga A., Church, Vicki L., Moore, Cathy A., Kiddle, Guy, Carne, Christopher A., Parmar, Surendra, Jalal, Hamid, Tisi, Laurence C., Murray, James A. H.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2994769/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21152399
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0014155
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author Gandelman, Olga A.
Church, Vicki L.
Moore, Cathy A.
Kiddle, Guy
Carne, Christopher A.
Parmar, Surendra
Jalal, Hamid
Tisi, Laurence C.
Murray, James A. H.
author_facet Gandelman, Olga A.
Church, Vicki L.
Moore, Cathy A.
Kiddle, Guy
Carne, Christopher A.
Parmar, Surendra
Jalal, Hamid
Tisi, Laurence C.
Murray, James A. H.
author_sort Gandelman, Olga A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The real-time monitoring of polynucleotide amplification is at the core of most molecular assays. This conventionally relies on fluorescent detection of the amplicon produced, requiring complex and costly hardware, often restricting it to specialised laboratories. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here we report the first real-time, closed-tube luminescent reporter system for nucleic acid amplification technologies (NAATs) enabling the progress of amplification to be continuously monitored using simple light measuring equipment. The Bioluminescent Assay in Real-Time (BART) continuously reports through bioluminescent output the exponential increase of inorganic pyrophosphate (PP(i)) produced during the isothermal amplification of a specific nucleic acid target. BART relies on the coupled conversion of inorganic pyrophosphate (PP(i)) produced stoichiometrically during nucleic acid synthesis to ATP by the enzyme ATP sulfurylase, and can therefore be coupled to a wide range of isothermal NAATs. During nucleic acid amplification, enzymatic conversion of PP(i) released during DNA synthesis into ATP is continuously monitored through the bioluminescence generated by thermostable firefly luciferase. The assay shows a unique kinetic signature for nucleic acid amplifications with a readily identifiable light output peak, whose timing is proportional to the concentration of original target nucleic acid. This allows qualitative and quantitative analysis of specific targets, and readily differentiates between negative and positive samples. Since quantitation in BART is based on determination of time-to-peak rather than absolute intensity of light emission, complex or highly sensitive light detectors are not required. CONCLUSIONS: The combined chemistries of the BART reporter and amplification require only a constant temperature maintained by a heating block and are shown to be robust in the analysis of clinical samples. Since monitoring the BART reaction requires only a simple light detector, the iNAAT-BART combination is ideal for molecular diagnostic assays in both laboratory and low resource settings.
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spelling pubmed-29947692010-12-08 Novel Bioluminescent Quantitative Detection of Nucleic Acid Amplification in Real-Time Gandelman, Olga A. Church, Vicki L. Moore, Cathy A. Kiddle, Guy Carne, Christopher A. Parmar, Surendra Jalal, Hamid Tisi, Laurence C. Murray, James A. H. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The real-time monitoring of polynucleotide amplification is at the core of most molecular assays. This conventionally relies on fluorescent detection of the amplicon produced, requiring complex and costly hardware, often restricting it to specialised laboratories. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here we report the first real-time, closed-tube luminescent reporter system for nucleic acid amplification technologies (NAATs) enabling the progress of amplification to be continuously monitored using simple light measuring equipment. The Bioluminescent Assay in Real-Time (BART) continuously reports through bioluminescent output the exponential increase of inorganic pyrophosphate (PP(i)) produced during the isothermal amplification of a specific nucleic acid target. BART relies on the coupled conversion of inorganic pyrophosphate (PP(i)) produced stoichiometrically during nucleic acid synthesis to ATP by the enzyme ATP sulfurylase, and can therefore be coupled to a wide range of isothermal NAATs. During nucleic acid amplification, enzymatic conversion of PP(i) released during DNA synthesis into ATP is continuously monitored through the bioluminescence generated by thermostable firefly luciferase. The assay shows a unique kinetic signature for nucleic acid amplifications with a readily identifiable light output peak, whose timing is proportional to the concentration of original target nucleic acid. This allows qualitative and quantitative analysis of specific targets, and readily differentiates between negative and positive samples. Since quantitation in BART is based on determination of time-to-peak rather than absolute intensity of light emission, complex or highly sensitive light detectors are not required. CONCLUSIONS: The combined chemistries of the BART reporter and amplification require only a constant temperature maintained by a heating block and are shown to be robust in the analysis of clinical samples. Since monitoring the BART reaction requires only a simple light detector, the iNAAT-BART combination is ideal for molecular diagnostic assays in both laboratory and low resource settings. Public Library of Science 2010-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2994769/ /pubmed/21152399 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0014155 Text en Gandelman et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gandelman, Olga A.
Church, Vicki L.
Moore, Cathy A.
Kiddle, Guy
Carne, Christopher A.
Parmar, Surendra
Jalal, Hamid
Tisi, Laurence C.
Murray, James A. H.
Novel Bioluminescent Quantitative Detection of Nucleic Acid Amplification in Real-Time
title Novel Bioluminescent Quantitative Detection of Nucleic Acid Amplification in Real-Time
title_full Novel Bioluminescent Quantitative Detection of Nucleic Acid Amplification in Real-Time
title_fullStr Novel Bioluminescent Quantitative Detection of Nucleic Acid Amplification in Real-Time
title_full_unstemmed Novel Bioluminescent Quantitative Detection of Nucleic Acid Amplification in Real-Time
title_short Novel Bioluminescent Quantitative Detection of Nucleic Acid Amplification in Real-Time
title_sort novel bioluminescent quantitative detection of nucleic acid amplification in real-time
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2994769/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21152399
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0014155
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