Simulation-Guided Rational Design of DNA Probe for Accurate Discrimination of Single-Nucleotide Variants Based on "Hill-Type" Cooperativity
- PMID: 36695821
- DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c04446
Simulation-Guided Rational Design of DNA Probe for Accurate Discrimination of Single-Nucleotide Variants Based on "Hill-Type" Cooperativity
Abstract
The accurate discrimination of single-nucleotide variants is of great interest for disease diagnosis and clinical treatments. In this work, a unique DNA probe with "Hill-type" cooperativity was first developed based on toehold-mediated strand displacement processes. Under simulation, this probe owns great thermodynamics advantage for specificity due to two mismatch bubbles formed in the presence of single-nucleotide variants. Besides, the strategies of ΔG' = 0 and more competitive strands are also beneficial to discriminate single-nucleotide variants. The feasibility of this probe was successfully demonstrated in consistent with simulation results. Due to "Hill-type" cooperativity, the probe allows a steeper dynamic range compared with previous probes. With simulation-guided rational design, the resulting probe can accurately discriminate single-nucleotide variants including nucleotide insertions, mutation, and deletions, which are arbitrarily distributed in target sequence. Two specificity parameters were calculated to quantitatively evaluate its good discrimination ability. Hence, "Hill-type" cooperativity can serve as a novel strategy in DNA probe's design for accurate discrimination of single-nucleotide variants.
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