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Next-Generation in Situ Hybridization Chain Reaction: Higher Gain, Lower Cost, Greater Durability

[Image: see text] Hybridization chain reaction (HCR) provides multiplexed, isothermal, enzyme-free, molecular signal amplification in diverse settings. Within intact vertebrate embryos, where signal-to-background is at a premium, HCR in situ amplification enables simultaneous mapping of multiple tar...

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Autores principales: Choi, Harry M. T., Beck, Victor A., Pierce, Niles A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2014
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4046802/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24712299
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/nn405717p
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author Choi, Harry M. T.
Beck, Victor A.
Pierce, Niles A.
author_facet Choi, Harry M. T.
Beck, Victor A.
Pierce, Niles A.
author_sort Choi, Harry M. T.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Hybridization chain reaction (HCR) provides multiplexed, isothermal, enzyme-free, molecular signal amplification in diverse settings. Within intact vertebrate embryos, where signal-to-background is at a premium, HCR in situ amplification enables simultaneous mapping of multiple target mRNAs, addressing a longstanding challenge in the biological sciences. With this approach, RNA probes complementary to mRNA targets trigger chain reactions in which metastable fluorophore-labeled RNA hairpins self-assemble into tethered fluorescent amplification polymers. The properties of HCR lead to straightforward multiplexing, deep sample penetration, high signal-to-background, and sharp subcellular signal localization within fixed whole-mount zebrafish embryos, a standard model system for the study of vertebrate development. However, RNA reagents are expensive and vulnerable to enzymatic degradation. Moreover, the stringent hybridization conditions used to destabilize nonspecific hairpin binding also reduce the energetic driving force for HCR polymerization, creating a trade-off between minimization of background and maximization of signal. Here, we eliminate this trade-off by demonstrating that low background levels can be achieved using permissive in situ amplification conditions (0% formamide, room temperature) and engineer next-generation DNA HCR amplifiers that maximize the free energy benefit per polymerization step while preserving the kinetic trapping property that underlies conditional polymerization, dramatically increasing signal gain, reducing reagent cost, and improving reagent durability.
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spelling pubmed-40468022014-06-09 Next-Generation in Situ Hybridization Chain Reaction: Higher Gain, Lower Cost, Greater Durability Choi, Harry M. T. Beck, Victor A. Pierce, Niles A. ACS Nano [Image: see text] Hybridization chain reaction (HCR) provides multiplexed, isothermal, enzyme-free, molecular signal amplification in diverse settings. Within intact vertebrate embryos, where signal-to-background is at a premium, HCR in situ amplification enables simultaneous mapping of multiple target mRNAs, addressing a longstanding challenge in the biological sciences. With this approach, RNA probes complementary to mRNA targets trigger chain reactions in which metastable fluorophore-labeled RNA hairpins self-assemble into tethered fluorescent amplification polymers. The properties of HCR lead to straightforward multiplexing, deep sample penetration, high signal-to-background, and sharp subcellular signal localization within fixed whole-mount zebrafish embryos, a standard model system for the study of vertebrate development. However, RNA reagents are expensive and vulnerable to enzymatic degradation. Moreover, the stringent hybridization conditions used to destabilize nonspecific hairpin binding also reduce the energetic driving force for HCR polymerization, creating a trade-off between minimization of background and maximization of signal. Here, we eliminate this trade-off by demonstrating that low background levels can be achieved using permissive in situ amplification conditions (0% formamide, room temperature) and engineer next-generation DNA HCR amplifiers that maximize the free energy benefit per polymerization step while preserving the kinetic trapping property that underlies conditional polymerization, dramatically increasing signal gain, reducing reagent cost, and improving reagent durability. American Chemical Society 2014-04-08 2014-05-27 /pmc/articles/PMC4046802/ /pubmed/24712299 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/nn405717p Text en Copyright © 2014 American Chemical Society Terms of Use (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_termsofuse.html)
spellingShingle Choi, Harry M. T.
Beck, Victor A.
Pierce, Niles A.
Next-Generation in Situ Hybridization Chain Reaction: Higher Gain, Lower Cost, Greater Durability
title Next-Generation in Situ Hybridization Chain Reaction: Higher Gain, Lower Cost, Greater Durability
title_full Next-Generation in Situ Hybridization Chain Reaction: Higher Gain, Lower Cost, Greater Durability
title_fullStr Next-Generation in Situ Hybridization Chain Reaction: Higher Gain, Lower Cost, Greater Durability
title_full_unstemmed Next-Generation in Situ Hybridization Chain Reaction: Higher Gain, Lower Cost, Greater Durability
title_short Next-Generation in Situ Hybridization Chain Reaction: Higher Gain, Lower Cost, Greater Durability
title_sort next-generation in situ hybridization chain reaction: higher gain, lower cost, greater durability
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4046802/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24712299
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/nn405717p
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