4.4 Article

A Single Molecular Beacon Probe Is Sufficient for the Analysis of Multiple Nucleic Acid Sequences

Journal

CHEMBIOCHEM
Volume 11, Issue 12, Pages 1762-1768

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cbic.201000287

Keywords

biosensors; DNA recognition; molecular beacons; nucleic acids

Funding

  1. UCF Office of Research and Commercialization, College of Science, Chemistry Department
  2. NHGRI [R21 HG004060]

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Molecular beacon (MB) probes are dual-labeled hairpin-shaped oligodeoxyribonucleotides that are extensively used for real-time detection of specific RNA/DNA analytes. In the MB probe, the loop fragment is complementary to the analyte: therefore, a unique probe is required for the analysis of each new analyte sequence. The conjugation of an oligonucleotide with two dyes and subsequent purification procedures add to the cost of MB probes, thus reducing their application in multiplex formats. Here we demonstrate how one MB probe can be used for the analysis of an arbitrary nucleic acid The approach fakes advantage of two oligonucleotide adaptor strands, each of which contains a fragment complementary to the analyte and a fragment complementary to an MB probe The presence of the analyte leads to association of MB probe and the two DNA strands in quadripartite complex The MB probe fluorescently reports the formation of this complex In this design, the MB does not bind the analyte directly; therefore, the MB sequence is independent of the analyte. In this study one universal MB probe was used to genotype three human polymorphic sites. This approach promises to reduce the cost of multiplex real-time assays and improve the accuracy of single-nucleotide polymorphism genotyping

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