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1.
IEEE Trans Biomed Circuits Syst ; 16(6): 1030-1043, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36191107

ABSTRACT

This work reports the first CMOS molecular electronics chip. It is configured as a biosensor, where the primary sensing element is a single molecule "molecular wire" consisting of a ∼100 GΩ, 25 nm long alpha-helical peptide integrated into a current monitoring circuit. The engineered peptide contains a central conjugation site for attachment of various probe molecules, such as DNA, proteins, enzymes, or antibodies, which program the biosensor to detect interactions with a specific target molecule. The current through the molecular wire under a dc applied voltage is monitored with millisecond temporal resolution. The detected signals are millisecond-scale, picoampere current pulses generated by each transient probe-target molecular interaction. Implemented in a 0.18 µm CMOS technology, 16k sensors are arrayed with a 20 µm pitch and read out at a 1 kHz frame rate. The resulting biosensor chip provides direct, real-time observation of the single-molecule interaction kinetics, unlike classical biosensors that measure ensemble averages of such events. This molecular electronics chip provides a platform for putting molecular biosensing "on-chip" to bring the power of semiconductor chips to diverse applications in biological research, diagnostics, sequencing, proteomics, drug discovery, and environmental monitoring.


Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques , Electronics , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis , Semiconductors , DNA/chemistry , Nanotechnology , Biosensing Techniques/methods
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(5)2022 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35074874

ABSTRACT

For nearly 50 years, the vision of using single molecules in circuits has been seen as providing the ultimate miniaturization of electronic chips. An advanced example of such a molecular electronics chip is presented here, with the important distinction that the molecular circuit elements play the role of general-purpose single-molecule sensors. The device consists of a semiconductor chip with a scalable array architecture. Each array element contains a synthetic molecular wire assembled to span nanoelectrodes in a current monitoring circuit. A central conjugation site is used to attach a single probe molecule that defines the target of the sensor. The chip digitizes the resulting picoamp-scale current-versus-time readout from each sensor element of the array at a rate of 1,000 frames per second. This provides detailed electrical signatures of the single-molecule interactions between the probe and targets present in a solution-phase test sample. This platform is used to measure the interaction kinetics of single molecules, without the use of labels, in a massively parallel fashion. To demonstrate broad applicability, examples are shown for probe molecule binding, including DNA oligos, aptamers, antibodies, and antigens, and the activity of enzymes relevant to diagnostics and sequencing, including a CRISPR/Cas enzyme binding a target DNA, and a DNA polymerase enzyme incorporating nucleotides as it copies a DNA template. All of these applications are accomplished with high sensitivity and resolution, on a manufacturable, scalable, all-electronic semiconductor chip device, thereby bringing the power of modern chips to these diverse areas of biosensing.


Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques/instrumentation , Electronics/instrumentation , Enzyme Assays/instrumentation , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis/instrumentation , DNA , Equipment Design/instrumentation , Kinetics , Lab-On-A-Chip Devices , Miniaturization/instrumentation , Nanotechnology/instrumentation , Semiconductors
3.
ACS Nano ; 15(1): 489-502, 2021 01 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33370106

ABSTRACT

DNA polymerases have revolutionized the biotechnology field due to their ability to precisely replicate stored genetic information. Screening variants of these enzymes for specific properties gives the opportunity to identify polymerases with different features. We have previously developed a single-molecule DNA sequencing platform by coupling a DNA polymerase to an α-hemolysin pore on a nanopore array. Here, we use this approach to demonstrate a single-molecule method that enables rapid screening of polymerase variants in a multiplex manner. In this approach, barcoded DNA strands are complexed with polymerase variants and serve as templates for nanopore sequencing. Nanopore sequencing of the barcoded DNA reveals both the barcode identity and kinetic properties of the polymerase variant associated with the cognate barcode, allowing for multiplexed investigation of many polymerase variants in parallel on a single nanopore array. Further, we develop a robust classification algorithm that discriminates kinetic characteristics of the different polymerase mutants. As a proof of concept, we demonstrate the utility of our approach by screening a library of ∼100 polymerases to identify variants for potential applications of biotechnological interest. We anticipate our screening method to be broadly useful for applications that require polymerases with altered physical properties.


Subject(s)
Nanopores , DNA , DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase , Kinetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(44): E6749-E6756, 2016 11 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27729524

ABSTRACT

Scalable, high-throughput DNA sequencing is a prerequisite for precision medicine and biomedical research. Recently, we presented a nanopore-based sequencing-by-synthesis (Nanopore-SBS) approach, which used a set of nucleotides with polymer tags that allow discrimination of the nucleotides in a biological nanopore. Here, we designed and covalently coupled a DNA polymerase to an α-hemolysin (αHL) heptamer using the SpyCatcher/SpyTag conjugation approach. These porin-polymerase conjugates were inserted into lipid bilayers on a complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS)-based electrode array for high-throughput electrical recording of DNA synthesis. The designed nanopore construct successfully detected the capture of tagged nucleotides complementary to a DNA base on a provided template. We measured over 200 tagged-nucleotide signals for each of the four bases and developed a classification method to uniquely distinguish them from each other and background signals. The probability of falsely identifying a background event as a true capture event was less than 1.2%. In the presence of all four tagged nucleotides, we observed sequential additions in real time during polymerase-catalyzed DNA synthesis. Single-polymerase coupling to a nanopore, in combination with the Nanopore-SBS approach, can provide the foundation for a low-cost, single-molecule, electronic DNA-sequencing platform.


Subject(s)
Electrodes , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing/instrumentation , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing/methods , Nanopores , DNA Replication , DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase , Equipment Design , Models, Molecular , Nucleotides/analysis , Nucleotides/chemistry , Polymers/chemistry , Porins/metabolism
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(19): 5233-8, 2016 May 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27091962

ABSTRACT

DNA sequencing by synthesis (SBS) offers a robust platform to decipher nucleic acid sequences. Recently, we reported a single-molecule nanopore-based SBS strategy that accurately distinguishes four bases by electronically detecting and differentiating four different polymer tags attached to the 5'-phosphate of the nucleotides during their incorporation into a growing DNA strand catalyzed by DNA polymerase. Further developing this approach, we report here the use of nucleotides tagged at the terminal phosphate with oligonucleotide-based polymers to perform nanopore SBS on an α-hemolysin nanopore array platform. We designed and synthesized several polymer-tagged nucleotides using tags that produce different electrical current blockade levels and verified they are active substrates for DNA polymerase. A highly processive DNA polymerase was conjugated to the nanopore, and the conjugates were complexed with primer/template DNA and inserted into lipid bilayers over individually addressable electrodes of the nanopore chip. When an incoming complementary-tagged nucleotide forms a tight ternary complex with the primer/template and polymerase, the tag enters the pore, and the current blockade level is measured. The levels displayed by the four nucleotides tagged with four different polymers captured in the nanopore in such ternary complexes were clearly distinguishable and sequence-specific, enabling continuous sequence determination during the polymerase reaction. Thus, real-time single-molecule electronic DNA sequencing data with single-base resolution were obtained. The use of these polymer-tagged nucleotides, combined with polymerase tethering to nanopores and multiplexed nanopore sensors, should lead to new high-throughput sequencing methods.


Subject(s)
Conductometry/instrumentation , DNA/genetics , Nanopores/ultrastructure , Nucleotides/genetics , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis/instrumentation , Sequence Analysis, DNA/instrumentation , Base Sequence , Computer Systems , DNA/chemistry , Equipment Design , Equipment Failure Analysis , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis/methods , Polymers/chemistry , Sequence Analysis, DNA/methods , Staining and Labeling/methods
6.
Nat Biotechnol ; 27(11): 1013-23, 2009 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19898456

ABSTRACT

DNA sequencing-by-synthesis (SBS) technology, using a polymerase or ligase enzyme as its core biochemistry, has already been incorporated in several second-generation DNA sequencing systems with significant performance. Notwithstanding the substantial success of these SBS platforms, challenges continue to limit the ability to reduce the cost of sequencing a human genome to $100,000 or less. Achieving dramatically reduced cost with enhanced throughput and quality will require the seamless integration of scientific and technological effort across disciplines within biochemistry, chemistry, physics and engineering. The challenges include sample preparation, surface chemistry, fluorescent labels, optimizing the enzyme-substrate system, optics, instrumentation, understanding tradeoffs of throughput versus accuracy, and read-length/phasing limitations. By framing these challenges in a manner accessible to a broad community of scientists and engineers, we hope to solicit input from the broader research community on means of accelerating the advancement of genome sequencing technology.


Subject(s)
DNA/biosynthesis , Sequence Analysis, DNA/methods , Animals , Fluorescent Dyes , Humans , Optical Phenomena , Sequence Analysis, DNA/instrumentation , Substrate Specificity , Surface Properties
7.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16247959

ABSTRACT

A number of terminal phosphate-labeled nucleotides with three or more phosphates and with varied length linkers attached between the terminal phosphate and the dye have been synthesized. These nucleotides have been tested as substrates for different DNA and RNA polymerases. We have also explored their utility in DNA sequencing, SNP analysis, nucleic acid amplification, quantitative PCR, and other biochemical assays.


Subject(s)
DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase/chemistry , Genetic Techniques , Nucleotides/chemistry , Nucleotides/chemical synthesis , Coloring Agents/pharmacology , DNA/chemistry , DNA Primers/chemistry , Models, Chemical , Phosphates/chemistry , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Time Factors
8.
J Am Chem Soc ; 127(8): 2394-5, 2005 Mar 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15724985

ABSTRACT

Nucleotides with a dye attached to the terminal phosphate with four or more phosphates (tetra- or pentaphosphates) are superior substrates than the corresponding triphosphates for DNA and RNA polymerases. When fluorogenic dyes are directly attached to the terminal phosphate, they can be released by the action of polymerase and alkaline phosphatase. The released dye changes color and fluorescence properties. The fluorescent signal can also be amplified by using multiple labeled nucleotides to detect small amounts of template. We have explored the utility of these nucleotides in a variety of applications including homogeneous SNP detection methods, DNA sequencing, and quantitation of PCR and RCA.


Subject(s)
DNA/analysis , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Nucleotides/chemistry , RNA/analysis , DNA/chemistry , Fluorescence , Nucleotides/chemical synthesis , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , RNA/chemistry
9.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14565445

ABSTRACT

A four-color set of negatively charged, single dye as well as energy transfer dye labeled-ddNTPs were synthesized and evaluated in combination with a novel polymerase in a "direct-load" DNA sequencing, obviating the laborious and time consuming post-reaction work-up.


Subject(s)
Coloring Agents , DNA/chemistry , Deoxyribonucleotides/chemical synthesis , Dideoxynucleosides/chemical synthesis , Base Sequence , Energy Transfer , Indicators and Reagents
10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14565474

ABSTRACT

A number of different energy transfer dye labeled-cassettes were synthesized using aminoacid based trifunctional linkers and coupled to the propargylamino-substituted dideoxynucleoside-5'-triphosphates (ddNTPs). These terminators were evaluated for their energy transfer efficiency and DNA sequencing potential using thermostable DNA polymerase.


Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer/methods , Base Sequence , DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase , Fluorescent Dyes , Terminator Regions, Genetic
11.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 31(16): 4769-78, 2003 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12907718

ABSTRACT

A series of charge-modified, dye-labeled 2', 3'-dideoxynucleoside-5'-triphosphates have been synthesized and evaluated as reagents for dye-terminator DNA sequencing. Unlike the commonly used dye-labeled terminators, these terminators possess a net positive charge and migrate in the opposite direction to dye-labeled Sanger fragments during electrophoresis. Post-sequencing reaction purification is not required to remove unreacted nucleotide or associated breakdown products prior to electrophoresis. Thus, DNA sequencing reaction mixtures can be loaded directly onto a separating medium such as a sequencing gel. The charge-modified nucleotides have also been shown to be more efficiently incorporated by a number of DNA polymerases than regular dye-labeled dideoxynucleotide terminators or indeed normal dideoxynucleoside-5'-triphosphates.


Subject(s)
DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase/metabolism , Dideoxynucleosides/chemistry , Lysine/analogs & derivatives , Nucleotides/metabolism , Sequence Analysis, DNA/methods , Base Sequence , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Coloring Agents/chemistry , DNA/chemistry , DNA/genetics , Lysine/chemistry , Molecular Sequence Data , Molecular Structure , Nucleotides/chemistry , Nucleotides/genetics , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
12.
Bioconjug Chem ; 13(4): 699-706, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12121123

ABSTRACT

Single color cyanine dye-labeled (Cy 5.0 and Cy 5.5) dideoxynucleoside-5'-triphosphates, or 'terminators', containing different spacer lengths were synthesized and evaluated for efficacy in DNA sequencing methods using a modified thermally stable DNA polymerase. The single color cyanine dye terminators were formulated into two separate sets of sequencing mixes, one for Cy 5.0 and the other for Cy 5.5, and evaluated on different automated sequencing platforms. Each set of mixes included two pyrimidine terminators with 17-atom linkers and two purine terminators with 10-atom linkers between the dye and the nucleotide. The two sets of cyanine dye-labeled terminators chosen for this cycle sequencing study produced improved band patterns with band uniformity similar to that obtained with dye-primer sequencing methods.


Subject(s)
Carbocyanines , DNA Probes/chemical synthesis , Dideoxynucleosides , Fluorescent Dyes , Sequence Analysis, DNA/methods , Base Sequence , Carbocyanines/chemistry , DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase , Deoxyribonucleotides/chemistry , Dideoxynucleosides/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Genetic Carrier Screening , Humans , Indicators and Reagents , Molecular Sequence Data , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Proteins/analysis
13.
Biotechniques ; Suppl: 44-7, 2002 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12083397

ABSTRACT

We have developed a novel, isothermal DNA amplification strategy that employs phi29 DNA polymerase and rolling circle amplification to generate high-quality templates for DNA sequencing reactions. The TempliPhi DNA amplification kits take advantage of the fact that cloned DNA is typically obtained in circular vectors, which are readily replicated in vitro using phi29 DNA polymerase by a rolling circle mechanism. This single subunit, proofreading DNA polymerase has excellent processivity and strand displacement properties for generation of multiple, tandem double-stranded copies of the circular DNA, generating as much as 10(7)-fold amplification. Large amounts of product (1-3 microg) can be obtained in as little as 4 hours. Input DNA can be as little as 0.01 ng of purified plasmid DNA, a single bacterial colony, or a 1 microL of a saturated overnight culture. Additionally, the presence of an associated proof reading function within the phi29 DNA polymerase ensures high-fidelity amplification. Once completed, the product DNA can be used directly in sequencing reactions. Additionally, the properties of phi29 DNA polymerase and its use in applications such as amplification ofhuman genomic DNA for genotyping studies is discussed.


Subject(s)
Bacillus Phages/genetics , DNA, Circular , DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase , Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques/instrumentation , Sequence Analysis, DNA/instrumentation , Templates, Genetic , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , DNA, Viral , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/virology , Gene Library , Humans , Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques/methods , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity
14.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 30(13): 2877-85, 2002 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12087172

ABSTRACT

A novel series of charge-modified, dye-labeled 2',3'-dideoxynucleoside-triphosphate terminators were synthesized and evaluated as reagents for DNA sequencing. These terminators possess an advantage over existing reagents in that no purification is required to remove unreacted nucleotide or associated breakdown products prior to electrophoretic separation of the sequencing fragments. This obviates the need for a time consuming post-reaction work up, allowing direct loading of DNA sequencing reaction mixtures onto a slab gel. Thermo Sequenase II DNA polymerase poorly incorporates the charge-modified terminators compared with regular dye-labeled terminators. However, extending the linker arm between dye and nucleotide and using a mutant form of a related DNA polymerase can in part mitigate the decrease in substrate efficiency. We also present evidence that these charge-modified terminators can relieve gel compression artefacts when used with dGTP in sequencing reactions.


Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Deoxyribonucleotides/chemistry , Sequence Analysis, DNA/methods , Coloring Agents/chemistry , DNA/genetics , DNA/metabolism , Electrophoresis/methods , Mutation , Reproducibility of Results , Taq Polymerase/genetics , Taq Polymerase/metabolism
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