| Literature DB >> 35624647 |
Maud Savonnet1,2, Mathilde Aubret1,2, Patricia Laurent2, Yoann Roupioz1, Myriam Cubizolles2, Arnaud Buhot1.
Abstract
Loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) is an exponential amplification method of DNA strands that is more and more used for its high performances. Thanks to its high sensitivity and selectivity, LAMP found numerous applications from the detection of pathogens or viruses through their genome amplification to its incorporation as an amplification strategy in protein or miRNA biomarker quantification. The LAMP method is composed of two stages: the first one consists in the transformation of the DNA strands into dumbbell structures formed of two stems and loops thanks to four primers; then, in the second stage, only two primers are required to amplify the dumbbells exponentially in numerous hairpins of increasing lengths. In this paper, we propose a theoretical framework to analyze the kinetics of the second stage of LAMP, the isothermal dumbbell exponential amplification (IDEA) as function of the physico-chemical parameters of the amplification reaction. Dedicated experiments validate the models. We believe these results may help the optimization of LAMP performances by reducing the number of experiments necessary to find the best parameters.Entities:
Keywords: isothermal dumbbell exponential amplification (IDEA); kinetic model; logistic function; loop mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP); nucleic acids amplification
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35624647 PMCID: PMC9138685 DOI: 10.3390/bios12050346
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Oligonucleotide sequences and dumbbell structures.
| Name | Length | Sequence (5 |
|---|---|---|
| B1 | 25 | GGG GGA AAG ATA TAA CTC AGA GAT G |
| B2 | 18 | GAA GGA GGG TCA GTG AGG |
| F1 | 21 | ATA AAC CGC GTC TTG GAT CCG |
| F2 | 24 | CGT GCA GTA CGC CAA CCT TTC TCA |
| FIP | 45 | F1c-F2 |
| BIP | 43 | B1c-B2 |
| Ext1a | 16 | TGC GCT GCC CCT CTT A |
| Ext1b | 23 | TGC GCT GCC CCT CTT ATA TCT TC |
| Ext2 | 3 | TGA |
| Ext3 | 30 | AGT TTA CAG CTC CTT AAG CCC CAT ATT GCC |
| SD | 134 | F1c-F2-F1-B1c-B2c-B1 |
| MD | 153 | F1c-F2-Ext1a-F1-Ext2-B1c-B2c-B1 |
| LD | 190 | F1c-F2-Ext1b-F1-Ext2-B1c-Ext3-B2c-B1 |
Figure 1The primers (BIP and FIP) and the dumbbells (Short dumbbell SD, middle dumbbell MD and long dumbbell LD) are depicted with their name sequences and respective extensions. At the bottom, the formation of the hairpin Hp1b from SD is obtained from an enzymatic extension of the 3 end.
Figure 2Duplication: Two hairpins Hp1f and Hp2f are created from the hairpin Hp1b with the use of a single BIP and enzymes.
Figure 3Normalized fluorescence in logarithmic scale on the y-axis as function of scaled time (in M.min) for three concentration of primers (M) and three MD dumbbell concentrations pM.
Figure 4Normalized fluorescence in linear (above) and logarithmic (below) scales as function of time for various concentrations of the dumbbell MD from 1 nM to 1 fM. The black dashed line is the half-saturation threshold for the determination of . The dark lines are the logistic fit of the experimental data.
Figure 5Dumbbell concentrations in logarithmic scale as function of time for various concentrations of dumbbells from 1 nM to 1 fM and for the three different dumbbell lengths.
Experimental (n = 2) versus theoretical predictions for the time at half saturation in minutes as function of the dumbbell lengths and concentrations. The experimental error is set as the standard deviation values calculated from the replicates. The fit at the reference concentration (1 nM) was used to determine [Ref] and k. The theoretical values were then determined from Equation (17). The column named Error reflects the variation between the experimental results (values at half saturation) and the theoretical predictions.
| Dumbbell | SD = 134 Bases | MD = 153 Bases | LD = 190 Bases | ||||||
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| 1 nM |
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| 100 pM |
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| 10 pM |
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| 1 pM |
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| 100 fM |
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| 10 fM |
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| 1 fM |
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