Detection of PCR products using self-probing amplicons and fluorescence
- 1 August 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Biotechnology
- Vol. 17 (8), 804-807
- https://doi.org/10.1038/11751
Abstract
Molecular diagnostics is progressing from low-throughput, heterogeneous, mostly manual technologies to higher throughput, closed-tube, and automated methods. Fluorescence is the favored signaling technology for such assays, and a number of techniques rely on energy transfer between a fluorophore and a proximal quencher molecule. In these methods, dual-labeled probes hybridize to an amplicon and changes in the quenching of the fluorophore are detected. We describe a new technology that is simple to use, gives highly specific information, and avoids the major difficulties of the alternative methods. It uses a primer with an integral tail that is used to probe an extension product of the primer. The probing of a target sequence is thereby converted into a unimolecular event, which has substantial benefits in terms of kinetics, thermodynamics, assay design, and probe reliability.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Multicolor molecular beacons for allele discriminationNature Biotechnology, 1998
- The elimination of primer-dimer accumulation in PCRNucleic Acids Research, 1997
- The potential of 5′ nuclease PCR for detecting a single-base polymorphism inOrthopoxvirusMolecular and Cellular Probes, 1997
- An Homogeneous Fluorescence Polymerase Chain Reaction Assay to IdentifySalmonellaAnalytical Biochemistry, 1997
- BRCA2 germline mutations in male breast cancer cases and breast cancer familiesNature Genetics, 1996
- Molecular Beacons: Probes that Fluoresce upon HybridizationNature Biotechnology, 1996
- Homogeneous Quantitative Assay of Hepatitis C Virus RNA by Polymerase Chain Reaction in the Presence of a Fluorescent IntercalaterAnalytical Biochemistry, 1995
- Towards fully automated genome–wide polymorphism screeningNature Genetics, 1995
- The production of PCR products with 5′ single-stranded tails using primers that incorporate novel phosphoramidite intermediatesNucleic Acids Research, 1993
- Detection of specific polymerase chain reaction product by utilizing the 5'----3' exonuclease activity of Thermus aquaticus DNA polymerase.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1991