UNIVERSAL LAMP ASSAYS FOR DETECTION OF NUCLEIC ACID TARGETS
20220372569 · 2022-11-24
Inventors
Cpc classification
C12Y207/07049
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12Q2537/143
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12Q2537/143
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N9/1252
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12Y207/07007
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N9/1276
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12Q1/6874
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
Abstract
Disclosed are compositions and methods that enable loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) of one or more nucleic acid targets without the need for conventional LAMP primer design customized to each target. A transduction reaction is performed upstream from the LAMP reaction. The transduction reaction generates a single stranded DNA (ssDNA) oligonucleotide when the target nucleic acid is present in the sample. The ssDNA generated in the transduction reaction functions as a required LAMP primer for a universal LAMP template. The ssDNA thus promotes the LAMP reaction. Analysis of the LAMP products can determine the presence of the one or more nucleic acid targets.
Claims
1. A method of performing loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) of a target nucleic acid, the method comprising: providing a sample; and performing a transduction reaction, the transduction reaction functioning to generate a single stranded DNA (ssDNA) oligonucleotide when the target nucleic acid is present in the sample, wherein the ssDNA generated by the transduction reaction functions as a required LAMP primer for a universal LAMP template, the LAMP primer thereby, when present, enabling a LAMP reaction to proceed.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the LAMP reaction is a reverse transcription LAMP (RT-LAMP) reaction.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the LAMP template is independent of the target nucleic acid.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein other required LAMP primers are provided such that the presence of the LAMP primer resulting from the transduction reaction determines whether the LAMP reaction will proceed.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the transduction reaction comprises: mixing a set of transduction primers with the sample, the transduction primers being configured to associate with the target nucleic acid, wherein a first transduction primer (A) includes a subsequence
6. The method of claim 5, wherein the first transduction primer (A) further comprises one or more additional subsequences, each of which are complementary to nucleic acid strands that function as primers for the LAMP reaction.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the transduction reaction is configured as an “OR” reaction, the transduction reaction functioning to generate the same transduced LAMP primer when any one of two or more target nucleic acids are present in the sample.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the transduction reaction is configured as an “AND” reaction, the transduction reaction functioning to generate a different required LAMP primer for each targeted nucleic acid present within the sample such that the LAMP reaction proceeds only if each targeted nucleic acid is present within the sample.
9. A composition formulated to enable loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) of a target nucleic acid, the composition comprising: a universal LAMP template; an incomplete set of LAMP primers corresponding to the universal LAMP template; and a set of primers configured to associate with the target nucleic acid, wherein the set of primers is configured to enable a transduction reaction that generates a single stranded DNA (ssDNA) oligonucleotide when the target nucleic acid is present in the sample, the ssDNA functioning as one of the LAMP primers to promote a LAMP reaction.
10. The composition of claim 9, further comprising a strand-displacing DNA polymerase.
11. The composition of claim 9, further comprising a reverse transcriptase.
12. The composition of claim 9, wherein the LAMP template is independent of the target nucleic acid.
13. The composition of claim 9, wherein the set of primers includes at least two primer subsets each directed to a different nucleic acid target.
14. The composition of claim 13, wherein the set of primers is configured for a multi-input ‘Logic OR’ determination, wherein two or more primer subsets are each configured to generate the same LAMP primer in the presence of their respective nucleic acid targets to thereby enable the LAMP reaction to proceed in the presence of any of these nucleic acid targets.
15. The composition of claim 14, wherein the incomplete set of LAMP primers lacks only the LAMP primer generated in the presence of the nucleic acid targets of the two or more primer subsets such that the LAMP reaction can proceed in the presence of any of the nucleic acid targets of the two or more primer subsets.
16. The composition of claim 13, wherein the set of primers is configured for a multi-input ‘Logic AND’ determination, wherein two or more primer subsets are each configured to generate a different LAMP primer in the presence of their respective nucleic acid targets to thereby enable the LAMP reaction to proceed only in the presence of each of these nucleic acid targets.
17. The composition of claim 16, wherein the incomplete set of LAMP primers lacks each of the LAMP primers generated in the presence of the nucleic acid targets of the two or more primer subsets such that the LAMP reaction can only proceed in the presence of each of the nucleic acid targets of the two or more primer subsets.
18. The composition of claim 13, wherein the set of primers is configured for a ‘Logic OR’ determination in combination with a ‘Logic AND’ determination, the set of primers comprising: one or more primer subsets (a) each configured to generate the same LAMP primer (A) in the presence of their respective nucleic acid targets such that the LAMP primer (A) is generated in the presence of any of the nucleic acid targets of the one or more primer subsets (a); and two or more primer subsets (b) each configured to generate the same LAMP primer (B) in the presence of their respective nucleic acid targets such that the LAMP primer (B) is generated in the presence of any of the nucleic acid targets of the two or more primer subsets (b), wherein the LAMP reaction proceeds only where both LAMP primer (A) and LAMP primer (B) are generated.
19. The composition of claim 18, wherein the set of primers comprises two or more primer subsets (a) each configured to generate the same LAMP primer (A) in the presence of their respective nucleic acid targets.
20. The composition of claim 18, further comprising one or more primer subsets, in addition to primer subsets (a) and primer subsets (b), configured to generate a LAMP primer different from LAMP primer (A) and LAMP primer (B) in the presence of their respective nucleic acid targets, wherein the LAMP reaction proceeds only where all of LAMP primer (A), LAMP primer (B), and the one or more additional LAMP primers are generated.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] Various objects, features, characteristics, and advantages of the invention will become apparent and more readily appreciated from the following description of the embodiments, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings and the appended claims, all of which form a part of this specification. In the Drawings, like reference numerals may be utilized to designate corresponding or similar parts in the various Figures, and the various elements depicted are not necessarily drawn to scale, wherein:
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Overview of Universal LAMP/RT-LAMP Assays
[0022] To substantially simplify the design and implementation of LAMP-based assays for effective detection of different targets, the present disclosure describes a simple scheme of universal LAMP/RT-LAMP, which leverages a novel transduction mechanism including three target-specific primers to rapidly initialize a highly optimized universal LAMP reaction upon the detection of any desired set of target DNA or RNA sequences. The coupling between the transduction reaction and the LAMP reaction is the target-triggered release of a universal ssDNA oligonucleotide that functions as one of the essential LAMP primers for a pre-designed, highly optimized LAMP reaction.
[0023] Distinct target nucleic acids can therefore be rapidly amplified with high specificity and sensitivity based on the design of only three primers as opposed to, in standard approaches, six specific LAMP primers for every target. In contrast to the state-of-the-art molecular assays that integrate multi-stage reactions with LAMP (see, e.g., Marciniak, J. Y.; Kummel, A. C.; Esener, S. C.; Heller, M. J.; Messmer, B. T. Coupled Rolling Circle Amplification Loop-Mediated Amplification for Rapid Detection of Short DNA Sequences. Biotechniques 2008, 45, 275-280), the presently described assays do not require additional enzymes or increases to the reaction time to achieve a high level of sensitivity and specificity on par with highly optimized LAMP/RT-LAMP assays.
[0024] The integration of the simple transduction mechanism with the universal LAMP reaction also facilitates direct implementations of Boolean logic operations during rapid detection of multiple nucleic acid targets. Various alternative design schemes of the ‘loaded primer’ are further described to enable flexible fine-tuning of the sensitivity, specificity, and multiplexity of the universal LAMP/RT-LAMP assays. Built-in support for Boolean logic computation also allows the use of a simple pH-based colorimetric readout (such as described in Tanner, N. A.; Zhang, Y.; Evans, T. C. Visual Detection of Isothermal Nucleic Acid Amplification Using PH-Sensitive Dyes. Biotechniques 2015, 58, 59-68, for example) or other relatively simple detection scheme for easy interpretation of the multiplexed test result by direct visual inspection.
[0025] A multiplexed assay with inherent support for Boolean logic computation offers numerous advantages for practical applications. For example, the multiplexed ‘Logic OR’ operation can be leveraged to improve the assay multiplexity (e.g., by simultaneously detecting multiple pathogens or multiple subtypes/mutants of a particular pathogen) or to enhance the assay sensitivity (e.g., by simultaneously detecting multiple genomic loci of a particular target pathogen). Similarly, the ‘Logic AND’ operation can be leveraged to improve the assay multiplexity (e.g., by detecting the co-presence of multiple pathogens or multiple subtypes/mutants of a particular pathogen) or to enhance the assay specificity (e.g., by detecting the co-presence of multiple genomic loci specific to a particular target pathogen).
[0026] The presently described assay enables universal rapid isothermal detection of nucleic acids (including but are not limited to DNA, ssDNA, dsDNA, RNA, mRNA, tRNA, microRNA, rRNA, siRNA, sgRNA, and nucleic acid analogues such as TNA, LNA, HNA, GNA) in either singleplex or multiplex assay format, offering higher sensitivity and specificity than PCR/RT-PCR while featuring simplified assay designs and lower development cost than conventional multiplex LAMP/RT-LAMP.
[0027] The universal assays as presently described are compatible with multiple readout methods, including but not limited to, colorimetric, fluorescence, chemiluminescence, electrochemical, turbidity, and the like. The presently described assays may also be employed in conjunction with readout mechanisms such as multiple fluorophore-quencher pairs, microcapillaries, lateral flow devices, or amplicon melting patterns.
[0028] In addition to applications in molecular diagnostics, the novel transduction mechanism proposed herein can be broadly applied to the field of DNA and RNA computing to easily enable universal transduction of input and output signals in complex molecular circuitries. For examples of such systems where the embodiments described herein may be utilized, see Song, X.; Reif, J. Nucleic Acid Databases and Molecular-Scale Computing. ACS Nano 2019, 13, 6256-6268 and Shah, S.; Wee, J.; Song, T.; Ceze, L.; Strauss, K.; Chen, Y.-J.; Reif, J. Using Strand Displacing Polymerase To Program Chemical Reaction Networks. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2020, 142, jacs.0c02240.
[0029] It will be understood that the universal transduction mechanism proposed herein is also broadly compatible with various other isothermal amplification techniques in addition to LAMP, including but not limited to, strand displacement amplification (SDA), nucleic acid sequence-based amplification (NASBA), rolling cycle amplification (RCA), isothermal multiple displacement amplification (IMDA), helicase-dependent amplification (HDA), recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA), nicking-enzyme amplification reaction (NEAR), single primer isothermal amplification (SPIA), and other variations of exponential amplification, linear amplification, and cascade amplification. See Zhao et al., Chem Rev. 2015 and Gill, P.; Ghaemi, A. Nucleic Acid Isothermal Amplification Technologies—A Review. Nucleosides, Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids 2008, 27, 224-243 for additional discussion of these techniques.
EXAMPLE EMBODIMENTS
[0030]
[0031] The illustrated transduction reaction includes these components: (1) a target strand that contains subsequences P2, P1, P3 (listed from 3′ to 5′ orientation) as three adjacent primer binding sites; (2) a loaded primer “A”, that includes a primer nucleic acid strand with subsequences Ū and
[0032]
[0033] In particular, step (a) includes the hybridization reaction between the target strand and the loaded primer “A” via the primer binding site P1 on the target strand. Step (b) includes the polymerization reaction initialized from the 3′ end of
[0034]
[0035] Scheme (b) illustrates the input and output of the transduction reaction based on a second design of the loaded primer A. In this scheme, the loaded primer A consists of a primer nucleic acid strand with multiple repeats of the subsequence Ū and a single subsequence
[0036] Scheme (c) illustrates the input and output of the transduction reaction based on a third design of the loaded primer A. In this scheme, the loaded primer A consists of a primer nucleic acid strand with a single subsequence
[0037] In
[0038] The present example utilizes the ssDNA ‘U’ released from the transduction reaction as the F3 primer in the universal LAMP reaction. However, depending on implementation preference, the ssDNA ‘U’ may be designed to serve as any one of the essential LAMP primers for optimal assay performance.
[0039] In
[0040] Step (a) illustrates the hybridization reaction between the universal template and the FIP primer via the primer binding site F2c on the universal template; step (b) illustrates the polymerization reaction initialized from the 3′ end of F2 of the nucleic acid complex produced from step (a); step (c) illustrates the hybridization reaction between the ssDNA ‘U’ released from the transduction reaction and the nucleic acid complex produced from step (b) via the primer binding site U on the universal template; step (d) illustrates the strand-displacing polymerization reaction initialized from the 3′ end of Ū of the nucleic acid complex produced from step (c), where the displaced ssDNA forms a nucleic acid complex with a loop structure at its 5′ end; step (e) illustrates the hybridizations of the BIP primer and the B3 primer with the nucleic acid complex produced from step (d) via the primer binding site B2c and B3c on the complex, respectively; step (f) illustrates the strand-displacing polymerization reaction initialized from the 3′ end of B2 of the nucleic acid complex produced from step (e) and the strand-displacing polymerization reaction initialized from the 3′ end of B3 of the nucleic acid complex produced from step (e), where the displaced ssDNA forms a nucleic acid complex with the loop structure at both ends; step (g) illustrates the hybridizations of the FIP primer, the BIP primer, the LoopF primer, and the LoopB primer with the nucleic acid complex produced from step (f) via the primer binding site F2c, B2c, FLP, and BLP on the complex, respectively; step (h) indicates the LAMP's self-primed auto-cycling amplification facilitated by the strand-displacing polymerization reactions initialized from the 3′ end of FIP, the 3′ end of LoopB, the 3′ end of BIP, and the 3′ end of LoopF of the nucleic acid complex produced from step (g), respectively.
[0041]
[0042] In the “Transduction Reaction Components,” (1) illustrates the sequence composition of the first target strand, which contains subsequences P2, P1, P3 (listed from 3′ to 5′ orientation) as three adjacent primer binding sites, and (2) illustrates the three primers for detection of the first target strand, including: a loaded primer that includes a primer nucleic acid strand with subsequences Ū and
[0043] Also under “Transduction Reaction Components,” (3) illustrates the sequence composition of the second target strand, which contains subsequences Q2, Q1, Q3 (listed from 3′ to 5′ orientation) as three adjacent primer binding sites, and (4) illustrates the three primers for detection of the second target strand, including: a loaded primer that includes a primer nucleic acid strand with subsequences Ū and
[0044] The “Universal LAMP Reaction Components” illustrates components of the universal LAMP reaction for detection of two distinct targets based on ‘Logic OR’: (1) is the sequence composition of a pre-designed universal template for a highly optimized LAMP reaction, containing subsequences Ū, F2c, F1c, B1, B2, B3 (listed from 3′ to 5′ orientation) as six primer binding sites required for standard LAMP reactions; (2) is the pre-optimized set of LAMP primers for rapid amplification of the universal template from (1), including the F3 primer including a primer nucleic acid strand U (provided by the transduction reaction), the B3 primer including primer nucleic acid strand B3, the FIP primer including a primer nucleic acid strand with subsequences F1c and F2 (listed from 5′ to 3′ orientation), the BIP primer including a primer nucleic acid strand with subsequences B1c and B2 (listed from 5′ to 3′ orientation), the LoopF primer including a primer nucleic acid strand FLPc, and the LoopB primer including a primer nucleic acid strand BLPc; and (3) is a strand-displacing polymerase.
[0045] Standard, known reagents such as reaction buffer and nuclease-free water are not depicted but may be included. In this example, the ssDNA ‘U’ released from the transduction reaction functions as the F3 primer in the universal LAMP reaction. Depending on the implementation preference, the ssDNA ‘U’ may be designed to serve as any one of the essential LAMP primers for optimal assay performance.
[0046]
[0047] Also under “Transduction Reaction Components,” (3) illustrates the sequence composition of the second target strand, which contains subsequences Q2, Q1, Q3 (listed from 3′ to 5′ orientation) as three adjacent primer binding sites, and (4) illustrates the three primers for detection of the second target strand, including: a loaded primer that includes a primer nucleic acid strand with subsequences
[0048] The “Universal LAMP Reaction Components” illustrates the components of the universal LAMP reaction for detection of two distinct targets based on ‘Logic AND’: (1) is the sequence composition of a pre-designed universal template for a highly optimized LAMP reaction. The template contains subsequences
[0049] Standard, known reagents such as reaction buffer and nuclease-free water are not depicted but may be included. In this example, the ssDNA ‘U1’ and the ssDNA ‘U2’ released from the transduction reaction function as the F3 primer and the B3 primer for the downstream universal LAMP reaction, respectively. Depending on the implementation preference, the ssDNA ‘U1’ and ‘U2’ may be designed to serve as any pair of the essential LAMP primers for optimal assay performance.
[0050]
[0051] Step (a) illustrates the hybridization reaction between the universal template and the FIP primer via the primer binding site F2c on the universal template; step (b) illustrates the polymerization reaction initialized from the 3′ end of F2 of the nucleic acid complex produced from step (a); step (c) illustrates the hybridization reaction between the ssDNA ‘U1’ released from the transduction reaction and the nucleic acid complex produced from step (b) via the primer binding site
[0052] The ‘Logic OR’ embodiment shown in
[0053] For a ‘Logic AND’ operation, up to six primer subsets may be included, each directed to a different nucleic acid target and each configured to generate a different LAMP primer in the presence of its respective target nucleic acid. Up to six of such primer subsets may be included because each of the potentially generated LAMP primers can correspond to one of the six LAMP primers of the universal LAMP template. Some embodiments may instead use up to four of such primer subsets, excluding the LoopF and LoopB primers so that they can instead be added directly to ensure their function of ‘speeding up’ the LAMP reaction is fully utilized.
[0054] Some embodiments may be configured for a ‘Logic OR’ determination in combination with a ‘Logic AND’ determination. For example, an embodiment may include a set of AND relationships with one or more nested OR relationships. As an example, a primer subset (a1) may be configured to generate a LAMP primer (A) in the presence of its nucleic acid target, and optionally one or more different primer subsets (a2, a3, a4, etc.) each also configured to generate the LAMP primer (A) in the presence of its respective nucleic acid target. Any number of additional (a)-type primer subsets may be included, each being configured to generate the LAMP primer (A) in the presence of its respective nucleic acid target. The embodiment can also include a primer subset (b1) configured to generate a different LAMP primer (B) in the presence of its nucleic acid target, and optionally one or more different primer subsets (b2, b3, b4, etc.) each also configured to generate the LAMP primer (B) in the presence of its respective nucleic acid target. Any number of additional (b)-type primer subsets may also be included, each being configured to generate the LAMP primer (B) in the presence of its respective nucleic acid target.
[0055] Such an embodiment incorporates AND logic because the LAMP reaction will only proceed if both the LAMP primer (A) and LAMP primer (B) are generated. The embodiment also incorporates OR logic because the LAMP primer (A) will be generated if at least one of the nucleic acid targets associated with the (a)-type primer subsets are present, and the LAMP (B) primer will be generated if at least one of the nucleic acid targets associated with the (b)-type primer subsets are present.
[0056] Some embodiments may incorporate additional AND relationships. For example, one or more (c)-type primer subsets may be included, each configured to generate a LAMP primer (C) in the presence of its respective nucleic acid target. The LAMP reaction will only proceed if each of LAMP primers (A), (B), and (C) are generated. As described above, up to six (or in some embodiments up to four) LAMP primers are generated in this manner, and each LAMP primer may optionally include multiple primer subsets with an OR relationship.
Additional Terms & Definitions
[0057] While certain embodiments of the present disclosure have been described in detail, with reference to specific configurations, parameters, components, elements, etcetera, the descriptions are illustrative and are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the claimed invention.
[0058] Furthermore, it should be understood that for any given element of component of a described embodiment, any of the possible alternatives listed for that element or component may generally be used individually or in combination with one another, unless implicitly or explicitly stated otherwise.
[0059] In addition, unless otherwise indicated, numbers expressing quantities, constituents, distances, or other measurements used in the specification and claims are to be understood as optionally being modified by the term “about” or its synonyms. When the terms “about,” “approximately,” “substantially,” or the like are used in conjunction with a stated amount, value, or condition, it may be taken to mean an amount, value or condition that deviates by less than 20%, less than 10%, less than 5%, less than 1%, less than 0.1%, or less than 0.01% of the stated amount, value, or condition. At the very least, and not as an attempt to limit the application of the doctrine of equivalents to the scope of the claims, each numerical parameter should be construed in light of the number of reported significant digits and by applying ordinary rounding techniques.
[0060] Any headings and subheadings used herein are for organizational purposes only and are not meant to be used to limit the scope of the description or the claims.
[0061] It will also be noted that, as used in this specification and the appended claims, the singular forms “a,” “an” and “the” do not exclude plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Thus, for example, an embodiment referencing a singular referent (e.g., “widget”) may also include two or more such referents.
[0062] It will also be appreciated that embodiments described herein may include properties, features (e.g., ingredients, components, members, elements, parts, and/or portions) described in other embodiments described herein. Accordingly, the various features of a given embodiment can be combined with and/or incorporated into other embodiments of the present disclosure. Thus, disclosure of certain features relative to a specific embodiment of the present disclosure should not be construed as limiting application or inclusion of said features to the specific embodiment. Rather, it will be appreciated that other embodiments can also include such features.