Title: Nucleic Acid Amplification
1Nucleic Acid Amplification
- Donna C. Sullivan, PhD
- Division of Infectious Diseases
- University of Mississippi Medical Center
2Objectives
- Describe the principle of amplification by
polymerase chain reaction (PCR). - Discuss how products are detected.
- Describe examples of modifications that have been
developed for PCR. - Differentiate between target amplification and
signal amplification. - Compare and contrast between the following in
vitro assays for amplifying nucleic acids PCR,
branched DNA, ligase chain reaction,
transcription mediated amplification, and hybrid
capture.
3MOLECULAR AMPLIFICATION TECHNIQUES
- Nucleic acid (NA) amplification methods fall into
3 categories - Target amplification systems
- Probe amplification systems
- Signal amplification
4Target Amplification Methods
- PCR
- PCR using specific probes
- RT PCR
- Nested PCR-increases sensitivity, uses two sets
of amplification primers, one internal to the
other - Multiplex PCR-two or more sets of primers
specific for different targets - Arbitrarily Primed PCR/Random Primer PCR
- NASBA - Nucleic Acid Sequence-Based Amplification
- TMA Transcription Mediated Amplification
- SDA - Strand Displacement Amplification
5Polymerase Chain Reaction
- Primer-directed in vitro enzymatic reaction for
the production of a specific DNA fragment.
6Cary Mullis and the Nobel Prize The Basics
- Knew that you could expose template DNA by
boiling ds DNA to produce ss DNA - Knew that you could use primers to initiate DNA
synthesis - Knew that a cheap, commercial enzyme was
available (Klenow fragment of E. coli DNA
polymerase)
7Cary Mullis and PCR
- Wanted a way to generate large amounts of DNA
from a single copy - Initially used the 3 graduate student method
- Denaturing
- Annealing
- Extending
8THREE STEPS OF PCR
- Denaturation of target (template)
- Usually 95oC
- Annealing of primers
- Temperature of annealing is dependent on the GC
content - May be high (no mismatch allowed) or low (allows
some mismatch) stringency - Extension (synthesis) of new strand
9AMPLIFICATION BY PCR
10PCR Step 1 Denaturation
11PCR Step 2 Annealing
12PCR Step 3 Extension
13PCR Cycle 2
14End of PCR Cycle 2
15- PCR product amplicon
- The number of amplicons 2N where N the
- number of cycles
16(No Transcript)
17(No Transcript)
18Components and Results of a PCR
19Features of Primers
- Types of primers
- Random
- Specific
- Primer length
- Annealing temperature
- Specificity
- Nucleotide composition
20DESIGNING PRIMERS
- Random amplification primers usually short
- 10-18 nt in length
- Vary percent G C content
- Longer the primer, the higher the annealling
temperature - The higher the annealling temperature, the
greater the specificity
21DESIGNING PRIMERS
- Nucleotide composition
- Self-annealling (primer dimers)
- High G C content allows higher annealling
temperature but increases risk of self-annealling - Primer-template match
- Get products even when primer/template not
perfectly matched - Single internal mismatch with 6-10 matches on
either side will have little effect on PCR
product yield
22ASSUMPTIONS
- Product produced is product desired
- There is always the possibility of mismatch and
production of artifacts - However, if it is the right size, its probably
the right product - Product is from the orthologous locus
- Multigene families and pseudogenes
23PCR Primers
- Primers are single-stranded 1830 b DNA fragments
complementary to sequences flanking the region to
be amplified. - Primers determine the specificity of the PCR
reaction. - The distance between the primer binding sites
will determine the size of the PCR product.
24Performing PCR
- Assemble a reaction mix containing all components
necessary for DNA synthesis. - Subject the reaction mix to an amplification
program. - Analyze the product of the PCR reaction (the
amplicon).
25A Standard PCR Reaction Mix
- 0.25 mM each primer
- 0.2 mM each dATP, dCTP, dGTP, dTTP
- 50 mM KCl
- 10 mM Tris, pH 8.4
- 1.5 mM MgCl2
- 2.5 units polymerase
- 102 - 105 copies of template
- 50 ml reaction volume
26Amplification Reaction
- Amplification takes place as the reaction mix is
subjected to an amplification program. - The amplification program consists of a series of
2050 PCR cycles.
27In Vitro Amplification
How much amplification do you get? Amplicons A
X 2n2 n number of cycles A starting target
copy number Reagent limitations and polymerase
infidelity result in plateau effect (reduced
amplification efficiency).
28Automation of PCR
- PCR requires repeated temperature changes.
- The thermal cycler changes temperatures in a
block or chamber holding the samples. - Thermostable polymerases are used to withstand
the repeated high denaturation temperatures.
29Thermostable Polymerases
- Taq Thermus aquaticus (most commonly used)
- Sequenase T. aquaticus YT-1
- Restorase (Taq repair enzyme)
- Tfl T. flavus
- Tth T. thermophilus HB-8
- Tli Thermococcus litoralis
- Carboysothermus hydrenoformans (RT-PCR)
- P. kodakaraensis (Thermococcus) (rapid synthesis)
- Pfu Pyrococcus furiosus (fidelity)
- Fused to DNA binding protein for processivity
30Thermostable DNA Polymerase Yellowstone
National Park
31Alvin Submersible for Exploration of Deep Sea
Vents
32Thermostable Polymerases
33PCR Cycle Temperatures
- Denaturation temperature
- Reduce double stranded molecules to single
stranded molecules - Annealing temperature
- Controls specificity of hybridization
- Extension temperature
- Optimized for individual polymerases
34Combinations Of Cycle Temperatures
35Interpretation of the PCR Results
- The PCR product should be of the expected size.
- No product should be present in the reagent
blank. - Misprimes may occur due to non-specific
hybridization of primers. - Primer dimers may occur due to hybridization of
primers to each other.
36Polymerase Chain ReactionControls for PCR
- Blank reaction
- Controls for contamination
- Contains all reagents except DNA template
- Negative control reaction
- Controls for specificity of the amplification
reaction - Contains all reagents and a DNA template lacking
the target sequence - Positive control reaction
- Controls for sensitivity
- Contains all reagents and a known
target-containing DNA template
37Analysis of PCR Products
38Diagnostic PCR AmplificationFrom Patient Samples
39Diagnostic PCR AmplificationFrom Patient Samples
40Detection of PCR Product
Reagent blank
Molecular weight markers
Misprime
PCR product
Primer dimers
41Avoiding Misprimes
- Use proper annealing temperature.
- Design primers carefully.
- Adjust monovalent cation concentration.
- Use hot-start prepare reaction mixes on ice,
place in preheated cycler or use a sequestered
enzyme that requires an initial heat activation. - Platinum Taq
- AmpliTaq Gold
- HotStarTaq
42Primer Design
- Avoid inter strand homologies
- Avoid intra strand homologies
- Tm of forward primer Tm of reverse primer
- G/C content of 2080 avoid longer than GGGG
- Product size (100700 bp)
- Target specificity
43Product Cleanup
- Gel elution
- Removes all reaction components as well as
misprimes and primer dimers - Solid phase isolation of PCR product (e.g., spin
columns) - DNA precipitation
44Contamination Control
- Any molecule of DNA containing the intended
target sequence is a potential source of
contamination. - The most dangerous contaminant is PCR product
from a previous reaction. - Laboratories are designed to prevent exposure of
pre-PCR reagents and materials to post-PCR
contaminants.
45Contamination Control
- Physical separation
- Air-locks, positive air flow
- PCR hoods with UV
- dUTP uracil-N-glycosylase (added to the PCR
reaction) - Psoralen UV (depends on UV wavelength and
distance to surface) - 10 bleach (most effective for surface
decontamination)
46Advantages of PCR
- PCR is fast (25 hours).
- DNA or RNA can be amplified.
- High-yield amplification can be achieved (106 to
109 amplification). - DNA from one cell equivalent can be amplified.
- PCR products can be directly sequenced.
- PCR products can be directly cloned.
- DNA sequences up to 30 kb can be amplified.
47PCR Advantages
- Specific
- Simple, rapid, relatively inexpensive
- Amplifies from low quantities
- Works on damaged DNA
- Sensitive
- Flexible
48PCR Limitations
- Contamination risk
- Primer complexities
- Primer-binding site complexities
- Amplifies rare species
- Detection methods
49Disadvantages of PCR
- Must know the sequence of the DNA of interest.
- Highly susceptible to contamination or false
amplification. - Amplification may not be 100 specific.
- Specificity of amplification is dependent on
temperature and Mg concentration. - Analysis and product detection usually takes
longer than the PCR reaction itself.
50Troubleshooting PCR
- No PCR product
- Verify that all components were added to the
reaction. - Check pipetors and reagents.
- Check detection method.
- Too many bands
- Specificity of primers.
- Annealing temp too low, excessive Mg or cycles.
51Troubleshooting PCR (cont.)
- Primer dimers
- Size is the sum of two primer lengths.
- Taq extends one primer, which is annealed to
another primer. - Annealing temperature too low, excess primers.
52PCR Inhibitors
- Detergent
- Phenol
- Heparin
- Heme
- Dyes (bromphenol blue)
- CSF, urine, sputum, paraffin
Dilute extracted DNA.
53Contamination of PCR Reactions
- Most common cause is carelessness and bad
technique. - Separate pre- and post-PCR facilities.
- Dedicated pipetters and reagents.
- Change gloves.
- Aerosol barrier pipette tips.
- Meticulous technique
10 bleach, acid baths, UV light
54Uracil-N-Glycosylase (UNG)
- Substitute dUTP for dTTP in initial PCR mix.
- Proceed with PCR and detection.
- In the next PCR to be set up, initial 30 min
incubation at 37 C. - UNG will destroy any dUTP containing DNA products.
55PCR Modifications
- Nested PCR
- Multiplex PCR
- Tailed primers
- Sequence-specific PCR
- Allele specific
- Reverse-transcriptase PCR
- Long-range PCR
- Whole-genome amplification
- RAPD PCR (AP-PCR)
- Quantitative real-time PCR
56Reverse Transcription
- Reverse transcription is the process through
which a single-stranded RNA molecule gives rise
to a complementary DNA (cDNA) molecule through a
primer-dependent polymerase-dependent reaction. - First Strand Synthesis
57Reverse Transcription-Polymerase Chain Reaction
(RT-PCR)
- Steps in the RT-PCR reaction
- RNA isolation
- Reverse transcription
- PCR amplification
- Analysis of PCR product
58Reverse Transcription of RNA (RT)
- Primer Options for RT reaction
- Oligo (dT)
- Random Hexamers
- Sequence-specific Primers
- Enzyme Options for RT Reaction
- Retroviral RNA-directed DNA polymerase
- AMV Reverse Transcriptase (avian myeloblastosis
virus) - MMLV Reverse Transcriptase (Moloney murine
leukemia virus)
59PCR Amplification Methods for Mutation Detection
- Allele-specific amplification (uses
sequence-specific primers for wild-type and
mutant alleles) - Competitive oligonucleotide priming (uses
sequence-specific primers for wild-type and
mutant alleles that are present in the same
reaction mixture)
60Allele-specific PCR Amplification
61PCR Applications
- Structural analysis
- DNA typing
- Disease detection
- Cloning
- Mutation analysis
- Detection of gene expression
- Mapping
- Site-directed mutagenesis
- Sequencing
62Analysis of PCR Products
63REAL TIME PCR
- Detects PCR products as they accumulate
- Detect ds DNA by two methods
- Intercalator fluorescent markers (ethidium
bromide, syber green dye) non specific - Fluorogenic probes specific
- Plot increase in fluorescence versus cycle number
64GEL ANALYSIS VS FLUORESCENCE
65DNA Detection SYBR Green I Dye
DENATURATION STEP DNA PRIMERS DYE WEAK
BACKGROUND FLUORESCENCE
ANEALING STEPDYE BINDS dsDNA, EMITS LIGHT
EXTENSION STEP MEASURE LIGHT EMMISSION
66Automated PCR and Detection
- The COBAS Amplicor Analyzer
- Samples are amplified and products detected
automatically after the PCR reaction - Used for infectious disease applications (HIV,
HCV, HBV, CMV, Chlamydia, Neisseria,
Mycobacterium tuberculosis) - Real-time or quantitative PCR (qPCR)
- Products are detected by fluorescence during
the PCR reaction
67Real-Time or Quantitative PCR (qPCR)
- Standard PCR with an added probe or dye to
generate a fluorescent signal from the product. - Detection of signal in real time allows
quantification of starting material. - Performed in specialized thermal cyclers with
fluorescent detection systems.
68Quantitative PCR (qPCR)
- PCR product grows in an exponential fashion
(doubling at each cycle). - PCR signal is observed as an exponential curve
with a lag phase, a log phase, a linear phase,
and a stationary phase. - The length of the lag phase is inversely
proportional to the amount of starting material.
69Real Time PCR Growth Curve
70Cycle Threshold (Ct)
71Construction of Standard Curve
72qPCR Detection Systems
- DNA-specific dyes
- Ethidium bromide
- SyBr? green
- Hybridization probes
- Cleavage-based (TaqMan?)
- Displaceable (Molecular Beacons?, FRET?)
- Primer-incorporated probes
73Real-Time PCR Labeled Probes
- Cleavage-based probes
- TaqMan Assay
- Fluorescent reporter at 5 end and a quencher at
3 end - Molecular beacons
- Hairpin loop structure
- Fluorescent reporter at 5 end and a quencher at
3 end - FRET probes
- Fluorescence resonance energy transfer probes
74Cleavage-based Assay TaqMan 5-3 Exonuclease
Cleavage of Dual labeled Probe
75Molecular Beacon Assay
76FRET Probe
77Target Amplification Methods
- PCR
- PCR using specific probes
- RT PCR
- Nested PCR-increases sensitivity, uses two sets
of amplification primers, one internal to the
other - Multiplex PCR-two or more sets of primers
specific for different targets - Arbitrarily Primed PCR/Random Primer PCR
- NASBA - Nucleic Acid Sequence-Based Amplification
- TMA Transcription Mediated Amplification
- SDA - Strand Displacement Amplification
78qPCR Detection Systems
- DNA-specific dyes bind and fluoresce
double-stranded DNA nonspecifically. - Hybridization probes only bind and fluoresce the
intended PCR product. - Primer-incorporated probes label the PCR product.
79qPCR SyBr? Green
- Binds minor groove of double-stranded DNA.
- Product can be further tested in a
post-amplification melt curve in which sequences
have characteristic melting temperatures.
80qPCR TaqMan?
81qPCR FRET?
82qPCR Molecular Beacons?
83qPCR Detection Systems
- Thermal cyclers with fluorescent detection and
specialized software. - PCR reaction takes place in optically clear
plates, tubes, or capillaries.
Cepheid Smart Cycler
Roche LightCycler
84MOLECULAR AMPLIFICATION TECHNIQUES
- Nucleic acid (NA) amplification methods fall into
3 categories - Target amplification systems
- Probe amplification systems
- Signal amplification
85Other Amplification Methods
- Ligase chain reaction (LCR)
- Branched DNA (bDNA)
- Hybrid capture (HC)
- Transcription-mediated amplification, self-
sustaining sequence replication, nucleic acid
sequence-based amplification (TMA, 3SR, NASBA)
86Ligase Chain Reaction
- Isothermal
- Probe amplification
- Probes bind immediately adjacent to one another
on template. - The bound probes are ligated and become templates
for the binding of more probes. - C. trachomatis, N. gonorrhoeae, sickle cell
mutation
87Ligase Chain Reaction Amplification of Genomic DNA
- Two primers are directed against adjacent target
sequences. - Successfully annealed primers are ligated
together through the action of a thermostable DNA
ligase (amplification is accomplished through
successive cycles of annealing and ligation). - Useful for detection of specific mutations in
gene sequences. - Adapted for diagnostic testing of some infectious
agents (chlamydia, gonorrhea, listeria, and HPV).
88Ligase Chain Reaction
Template
Probes
...GTACTCTAGCT...
A G
T C
...CATGAGATCGA...
ligase
Target sequences are detected by coupled and
.
89Ligase Chain Reaction Amplification of Genomic
DNA
90Ligase Chain Reaction Mutation Detection
Utilizing Mutant-SpecificOligonucleotide Primers
91LCR Detection ofChlamydia trachomatis
- Cryptic plasmid target sequence (710 copies per
organism) - 48 bp target within the cryptic plasmid
- Unique DNA sequence (confers specificity)
- Highly conserved among all C. trachomatis serovars
92LCR Detection ofChlamydia trachomatis
- Cryptic plasmid target sequence (710 copies per
organism) - 48 bp target within the cryptic plasmid
- Unique DNA sequence (confers specificity)
- Highly conserved among all C. trachomatis serovars
93Nucleic Acid Sequence Based Amplification (NASBA)
- Reactions are isothermal (eliminating the need
for a thermocycler). - All enzymatic reactions take place concurrently
(reducing the total time to completion of
procedure). - Provides exceptional sensitivity (109-fold
amplification). - Applications include detection of HIV and other
viruses (hepatitis, HTLV, CMV). - Available in kit form from
- Organon Teknika (Durham, NC)
94NASBAThe Basic Procedure
- Hybridization of oligonucleotide-T7P primer to
target sequence - Reverse transcription with reverse transcriptase
(generation of RNADNA hybrid) - Digestion with RNase H
95NASBAThe Basic Procedure (cont.)
- Hybridization with target-specific
oligonucleotide primer (P2) - Reverse transcription with reverse transcriptase
(generation of double-stranded DNA) - Generation of RNA transcript by T7 RNA polymerase
96NASBA
97NASBA
98NASBA
99Transcription-Mediated Amplification (TMA)
- RNA transcription amplification system utilizes
two enzymes (RT and RNA pol). - Isothermal reaction, logarithmic amplification.
- RNA or DNA targets.
- Produces RNA amplicons.
- Hybridization protection assay (HPA) simultaneous
detection.
100Microwell DNA Detection Systems
Addition of PCR Product (generated with
biotin-labeled primer)
Microwell with Bound Capture Probe
Colorimetric Detection
Addition of Avidin-enzyme Complexes
101Strand Displacement Amplification
- Strand displacement amplification and homogeneous
real-time detection are incorporated in a
second-generation DNA probe system, BDProbeTecET. - Little MC, et al.
- Clin Chem 199945777784
102Strand Displacement AmplificationThe
BDProbeTecET System
- This system is based on the simultaneous
amplification of nucleic acids by SDA and
real-time detection using fluorescence energy
transfer. It is useful in infectious disease
testing (Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria
gonorrhoeae). - High throughput
- High sensitivity
103Strand Displacement AmplificationInstrumentation
- The BDProbeTecET instrument is a fluorescent
reader capable of maintaining constant
temperature, monitoring real-time fluorescence,
and reporting results through an algorithm. - Additional instruments include heating blocks for
sample preparation and priming steps of the
reaction.
104Strand Displacement AmplificationInstrumentation
- Priming microwell contains dried SDA primers, one
dNTP, and fluorescent oligonucleotide probe. - Amplification microwell contains the remaining
dried SDA reagents, including enzymes. - SDA Reaction Phases
- Target generation
- Exponential target amplification
- Detection
105Strand Displacement AmplificationTarget
Generation
106Strand Displacement AmplificationTarget
Generation
107Strand Displacement AmplificationTarget
Generation
108Strand Displacement AmplificationExponential
Target Amplification
109Strand Displacement AmplificationExponential
Target Amplification
110Strand Displacement AmplificationMechanism of
Fluorescence Energy Transfer
111Strand Displacement AmplificationMechanism of
Fluorescence Energy Transfer
Fluorescein Label
Rhodamine Label
Dual-dye Labeled Hairpin Probe
Cleaved Duplex Yields Fluorescent Signal
BsoB1
112Strand Displacement AmplificationDetection of
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
113Branched DNA Detection
- Target nucleic acid sequences are not replicated
through enzymatic amplification. - Detection sensitivity is provided by
amplification of the signal from the probe. - Uses capture probes, bDNA probes and bDNA
amplifier probes. - Assay is based upon microtiter plate technology.
114Branched DNA Detection
115Branched DNA (bDNA)
- Isothermal
- Signal amplification
- A series of hybridizations attaches multiple
signals to each target molecule. - HBV, HCV, HIV-1
116Branched DNA
117Hybrid Capture
- Isothermal
- Signal amplification
- Immobilized DNA probes bind to RNA targets.
- The RNADNA hybrids are bound by labeled
monoclonal antibodies. - HPV, HBV, CMV
118Hybrid Capture
119Transcription-mediated Amplification (TMA)
- Isothermal
- Target amplification as RNA
- cDNA is made from RNA target adding RNA
polymerase promoter. - RNA is synthesized from the cDNA template and can
serve as a source of new cDNA. - M. tuberculosis, C. trachomatis, HIV, CMV
120Transcription-Mediated Amplification
121Summary
- PCR is a method to specifically amplify target
sequences in a complex mixture. - The primers determine what sequences are
amplified (specificity). - Contamination control is important in
laboratories performing PCR. - Quantitative PCR offers the advantage of
quantifying target. - In addition to PCR, signal and probe
amplification methods are available for use in
the clinical laboratory.
122DNA Sequencing
123Objectives
- Compare and contrast the chemical (Maxam/Gilbert)
and chain termination (Sanger) sequencing
methods. - List the components and molecular reactions that
occur in chain termination sequencing. - Discuss the advantages of dye primer and dye
terminator sequencing. - Derive a text DNA sequence from raw sequencing
data. - Describe examples of alternative sequencing
methods, such as bisulfite sequencing and
pyrosequencing.
124Sequencing Methods
- Maxam/Gilbert chemical sequencing
- Sanger chain termination sequencing
- Pyro-sequencing
- Array sequencing
125Maxam-Gilbert Sequencing
DMS
FA
H
HS
G
G
C
C
A
T
C
G
G
T
C
G
G
C
C
A
T
G
C
C
A
T
Maxam-Gilbert sequencing is performed by chain
breakage at specific nucleotides.
126Maxam-Gilbert Sequencing
Sequencing gels are read from bottom to top (5'
to 3').
127Chain Termination (Sanger) Sequencing
- A modified DNA replication reaction.
- Growing chains are terminated by dideoxy
nucleotides.
128Chain Termination (Sanger) Sequencing
- The 3'-OH group necessary for formation of the
phosphodiester bond is missing in ddNTPs.
Chain terminates at ddG
129Chain Termination (Sanger) Sequencing
- A sequencing reaction mix includes labeled primer
and template. - Dideoxy nucleotides are added separately to each
of the four tubes.
130Chain Termination (Sanger) Sequencing
131Chain Termination (Sanger) Sequencing
- With addition of enzyme (DNA polymerase), the
primer is extended until a ddNTP is encountered. - The chain will end with the incorporation of the
ddNTP. - With the proper dNTPddNTP ratio, the chain will
terminate throughout the length of the template. - All terminated chains will end in the ddNTP added
to that reaction.
132Chain Termination (Sanger) Sequencing
- The collection of fragments is a sequencing
ladder. - The resulting terminated chains are resolved by
electrophoresis. - Fragments from each of the four tubes are placed
in four separate gel lanes.
133Chain Termination (Sanger) Sequencing
G A T C
Sequencing gels are read from bottom to top (5'
to 3').
134Cycle Sequencing
- Cycle sequencing is chain termination sequencing
performed in a thermal cycler. - Cycle sequencing requires a heat-stable DNA
polymerase.
135Fluorescent Dyes
- Fluorescent dyes are multi-cyclic molecules that
absorb and emit fluorescent light at specific
wavelengths. - Examples are fluorescein and rhodamine
derivatives. - For sequencing applications, these molecules can
be covalently attached to nucleotides.
136Fluorescent Dyes
- In dye primer sequencing, the primer contains
fluorescent dyeconjugated nucleotides, labeling
the sequencing ladder at the 5' ends of the
chains. - In dye terminator sequencing, the fluorescent dye
molecules are covalently attached to the dideoxy
nucleotides, labeling the sequencing ladder at
the 3' ends of the chains.
137Dye Terminator Sequencing
- A distinct dye or color is used for each of the
four ddNTP. - Since the terminating nucleotides can be
distinguished by color, all four reactions can be
performed in a single tube.
A
The fragments are distinguished by size and
color.
T
G
T
138Dye Terminator Sequencing
- The DNA ladder is resolved in one gel lane or
in a capillary.
G A T C
Slab gel
Capillary
139Dye Terminator Sequencing
- The DNA ladder is read on an electropherogram.
Capillary
Slab gel
Electropherogram
5' AGTCTG
140Automated Sequencing
- Dye primer or dye terminator sequencing on
capillary instruments. - Sequence analysis software provides analyzed
sequence in text and electropherogram form. - Peak patterns reflect mutations or sequence
changes.
T/T T/A
A/A
5' AGTCTG
5' AG(T/A)CTG
5' AGACTG
141Alternative Sequencing MethodsPyro-sequencing
- Pyro-sequencing is based on the generation of
light signal through release of pyrophosphate
(PPi) on nucleotide addition. - DNAn dNTP ? DNAn1 PPI
- PPi is used to generate ATP from adenosine
phosphosulfate (APS). - APS PPI ? ATP
- ATP and luciferase generate light by conversion
of luciferin to oxyluciferin.
142Alternative Sequencing MethodsPyro-sequencing
- Each nucleotide is added in turn.
- Only one of four will generate a light signal.
- The remaining nucleotides are removed
enzymatically. - The light signal is recorded on a pyrogram.
DNA sequence A T C A GG CC T
Nucleotide added A T C A G C T
143Alternative Sequencing MethodsBisulfite
Sequencing
- Bisulfite sequencing is used to detect
methylation in DNA. - Bisulfite deaminates cytosine, making uracil.
- Methylated cytosine is not changed by bisulfite
treatment. - The bisulfite-treated template is then sequenced.
144Alternative Sequencing MethodsBisulfite
Sequencing
- The sequence of treated and untreated templates
is compared.
GTC
GGC
GATCTATC
GTGCA
Me
Me
Me
Methylated
sequence
GTC
Treated sequence
Me
GGC
Me
GATUTATC
Me
GTGUA
DNA Sequence
(Untreated) reference ...GTCGGCGATCTATCGTGCA
Treated sequence
...GTCGGCGATUTATCGTGUA
This sequence indicates that these Cs are
methylated.
145Summary
- Genetic information is stored in the order or
sequence of nucleotides in DNA. - Chain termination sequencing is the standard
method for the determination of nucleotide
sequence. - Dideoxy-chain termination sequencing has been
facilitated by the development of cycle
sequencing and the use of fluorescent dye
detection. - Alternative methods are used for special
applications, such as pyrosequencing (for
resequencing and polymorphism detection) or
bisulfite sequencing (to analyze methylated DNA).