Design and characterization of a nanopore-coupled polymerase for single-molecule DNA sequencing by synthesis on an electrode array

Scalable, high-throughput DNA sequencing is a prerequisite for precision medicine and biomedical research. Recently, we presented a nanopore-based sequencing-by-synthesis (Nanopore-SBS) approach, which used a set of nucleotides with polymer tags that allow discrimination of the nucleotides in a biol...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2016-11, Vol.113 (44), p.E6749-E6756
Hauptverfasser: Stranges, P. Benjamin, Palla, Mirkó, Kalachikov, Sergey, Nivala, Jeff, Dorwart, Michael, Trans, Andrew, Kumar, Shiv, Porel, Mintu, Chien, Minchen, Tao, Chuanjuan, Morozova, Irina, Li, Zengmin, Shi, Shundi, Aberra, Aman, Arnold, Cleoma, Yang, Alexander, Aguirre, Anne, Harada, Eric T., Korenblum, Daniel, Pollard, James, Bhat, Ashwini, Gremyachinskiy, Dmitriy, Bibillo, Arek, Chen, Roger, Davis, Randy, Russo, James J., Fuller, Carl W., Roever, Stefan, Ju, Jingyue, Church, George M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Scalable, high-throughput DNA sequencing is a prerequisite for precision medicine and biomedical research. Recently, we presented a nanopore-based sequencing-by-synthesis (Nanopore-SBS) approach, which used a set of nucleotides with polymer tags that allow discrimination of the nucleotides in a biological nanopore. Here, we designed and covalently coupled a DNA polymerase to an α-hemolysin (αHL) heptamer using the SpyCatcher/SpyTag conjugation approach. These porin–polymerase conjugates were inserted into lipid bilayers on a complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS)-based electrode array for high-throughput electrical recording of DNA synthesis. The designed nanopore construct successfully detected the capture of tagged nucleotides complementary to a DNA base on a provided template. We measured over 200 tagged-nucleotide signals for each of the four bases and developed a classification method to uniquely distinguish them from each other and background signals. The probability of falsely identifying a background event as a true capture event was less than 1.2%. In the presence of all four tagged nucleotides, we observed sequential additions in real time during polymerase-catalyzed DNA synthesis. Single-polymerase coupling to a nanopore, in combination with the Nanopore-SBS approach, can provide the foundation for a low-cost, single-molecule, electronic DNA-sequencing platform.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1608271113