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Published January 29, 2016 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Lack of correlation between reaction speed and analytical sensitivity in isothermal amplification reveals the value of digital methods for optimization: validation using digital real-time RT-LAMP

Abstract

In this paper, we asked if it is possible to identify the best primers and reaction conditions based on improvements in reaction speed when optimizing isothermal reactions. We used digital single-molecule, real-time analyses of both speed and efficiency of isothermal amplification reactions, which revealed that improvements in the speed of isothermal amplification reactions did not always correlate with improvements in digital efficiency (the fraction of molecules that amplify) or with analytical sensitivity. However, we observed that the speeds of amplification for single-molecule (in a digital device) and multi-molecule (e.g. in a PCR well plate) formats always correlated for the same conditions. Also, digital efficiency correlated with the analytical sensitivity of the same reaction performed in a multi-molecule format. Our finding was supported experimentally with examples of primer design, the use or exclusion of loop primers in different combinations, and the use of different enzyme mixtures in one-step reverse-transcription loop-mediated amplification (RT-LAMP). Our results show that measuring the digital efficiency of amplification of single-template molecules allows quick, reliable comparisons of the analytical sensitivity of reactions under any two tested conditions, independent of the speeds of the isothermal amplification reactions.

Additional Information

© 2015 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Received September 12, 2014. Revision received August 14, 2015. Accepted August 20, 2015. First published online: September 10, 2015. We thank Dr Nathan Tanner for providing the New England Biolabs enzyme system RTx Bst 2.0 specially designed for performing RT-LAMP reactions in one step; Matthew S. Curtis for HCV LAMP amplicon secondary structure predictions; Jesus Rodriguez-Manzano for his advice and help with bioinformatics and for independent validation experiments; and Natasha Shelby for contributions to writing and editing this manuscript. Funding:DARPA Cooperative Agreement No. HR0011-11-2-0006, National Institutes of Health [R01EB012946]; NIH Director's Pioneer Award DP1OD003584; NIH NRSA [5T32GM07616NSF to D.A.S.]; Caltech Innovation Initiative CI2. The content of this article does not necessarily reflect the position or the policy of the Government, and no official endorsement should be inferred. Funding for open access charge: DARPA Cooperative Agreement No. HR0011-11-2-0006. Conflict of interest statement. Rustem F. Ismagilov has a financial interest in SlipChip Corp.

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Published - Nucl._Acids_Res.-2016-Khorosheva-e10.pdf

Supplemental Material - Isothermal_NAR_SI_revised_9.1.15.pdf

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