A METHOD OF AMPLIFYING A TARGET NUCLEIC ACID

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20210189477
  • Publication Number
    20210189477
  • Date Filed
    September 19, 2018
    6 years ago
  • Date Published
    June 24, 2021
    3 years ago
  • Inventors
  • Original Assignees
    • PHOCUS TECHNOLOGY (SHANGHAI) CO. LTD
Abstract
The present disclosure provides a method of amplifying a target nucleic acid, wherein the method comprises: (a) providing a reaction mixture comprising: (i) a nucleic acid sample comprising or suspected of comprising the target nucleic acid, (ii) multiple primer pairs, wherein at least one primer of each type of primer pairs is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid, and each primer pair has at least one blocking primer comprising a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension, (iii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iv) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polymerase using the blocking primers; and (b) incubating the reaction mixture under a condition for amplification of the target nucleic acid and a kit used for the method. The present disclosure further provides a method of sequencing a target nucleic acid and a kit used for the method.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Human genetic mutations whether it is de novo or somatic are critical information to understand human genetic disease (Ku, C. S. et al, A new era in the discovery of de novo mutations underlying human genetic disease, Hum Genomics 6, 27, 2012), cancer biology (Helleday, T. et al, Mechanisms underlying mutational signatures in human cancers, Nat Rev Genet 15, 585-598, 2014) and potential anticancer therapies. de novo mutation has long been known to cause genetic disease and it also plays an important role in rare and common forms of neurodevelopmental diseases, including intellectual disability, autism and schizophrenia (Veltman, J. A. et al, De novo mutations in human genetic disease, Nat Rev Genet 13, 565-575, 2012). Somatic mutation in cancer genome has been extensively studied and believed to hold the key to understand cancer origin, risk and potential biomarker discovery for therapeutic use. Detection of those genetic mutations is critical for diagnosis of disease and patient treatment.


Studies of de novo or somatic mutations in the human genome have been very challenging in the past because of genomic sequencing technology limitations. However, the development of high-throughput next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies has greatly facilitated the study of such mutations. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) and whole-exome sequencing (WES) can now be performed on parent offspring trios to identify de novo point mutations in the entire genome or within protein-coding regions, respectively.


WGS and WES are great tools for genetic mutation study, but they are still cost prohibitive for routine clinical use. In some cases, if only a set of genetic mutations are known to be related with certain disease or particular drug response, it would be efficient and cost effective to do genetic analysis for those genes. In order to do a limited resequencing of panel of genes, those genes need to be captured before carrying out NGS. The capture process could be achieved using either hybridization or amplicon approach. For hybridization capture approach, gDNA was first physically fragmented or enzymatically digested, then synthetic oligonucleotides are hybridized to regions of interest in solution to capture the intended sequences. For amplicon based approach, the intended regions are directly captured by amplification of PCR primers. Hybridization capture approach is scalable to large number of genes, but hybridization step usually takes overnight and the total process takes multiple days. It also requires at least 1 to 2 μg of gDNA material input. Amplicon based approach takes less time and only require 10 to 50 ng gDNA input, so it is suitable if quantities of DNA input from clinical samples are limited. However, multiplex PCR primers also generate nonspecific amplification products especially when the number of PCR primers increase. In fact, majority of PCR products are nonspecific amplicons when the number of primers approaches hundreds. Therefore, amplicon based approach usually uses an enzyme digestion step to reduce nonspecific amplification product followed by additional ligation step or use a multiple steps of cleaning up to reduce those nonspecific products. Those nonspecific amplification products not only require multiple steps during sequencing library generation but also can introduce sequencing data errors.


Recently detection of low frequency mutation has been a rapidly growing area of interest because of its important applications in basic and clinical research. One kind of rare mutations, circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) from human plasma are used for prenatal screening (Chiu, R. W. et al, Noninvasive prenatal diagnosis empowered by high-throughput sequencing, Prenat Diagn 32, 401-406, 2012), while circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) has been confirmed to contain the hallmark mutations of cancerous cells. ctDNA has the potential to be a novel, non-invasive biomarker that promotes early cancer detection at a surgically curable stage, reduces the necessity of repeat tissue biopsies, and detects the early relapse of the disease, thereby increasing the efficacy of targeted therapy. For cancers that are often detected at a late stage, including lung, pancreatic, and ovarian etc., a high-sensitivity ctDNA assay could be used as an important screening test to detect typically terminal metastatic stage cancer at an earlier, potentially curable stage. With continuous ctDNA monitoring from patient blood, change of ctDNA composition and quantitation could be used to monitor cancer progression in real time, improving patient safety and eliminating the cost related to repeat tissue biopsies.


Unfortunately, detection of ctDNA remains challenging by its presence in relatively low quantities especially in early-stage cancer patients. There are several available techniques developed so far to detect ctDNA including BEAMing, digital PCR, and next generation sequencing. All those methods can detect low frequency mutations by assessing individual molecules one-by-one. NGS has the advantage over traditional methods in that large amount of sequencing information can be obtained easily in an automated fashion. However, NGS cannot generally be used to detect rare mutations because of its high error rate associated with NGS library generation and the sequencing process. Some of these errors presumably result from mutations introduced during template preparation, during the pre-amplification steps required for library preparation and during further solid-phase amplification on the instrument itself. Other errors are due to base mis-incorporation during sequencing and base-calling errors.


Therefore, there remains a continuing need for a novel approach to eliminate nonspecific amplification products during multiplex PCR reaction so that the sequencing library could be directly generated without additional digestion and. ligation steps, and a novel approach to reduce error rate so that rare mutation could be reliably detected using current NGS instrument.


BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

One aspect of the present disclosure provides a method of amplifying a target nucleic acid, wherein the method comprises: (a) providing a reaction mixture comprising: (i) a nucleic acid sample comprising or suspected of comprising the target nucleic acid, (ii) at least 20 different types of primer pairs, wherein at least one primer of each type of primer pairs is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid, and each primer pair has at least one blocking primer comprising a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension, (iii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iv) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleicacid polymerase using the blocking primers; and (b) incubating the reaction mixture under a condition for amplification of the target nucleic acid,


In some embodiments, the blocking group is at or near 3′ terminal of each blocking primer. In some embodiments, the blocking group is 2′, 3′-dideoxynucleotide, ribonucleotide residue, 2′, 3′ SH nucleotide, or 2′-O—PO3 nucleotide.


In some embodiments, the blocking primer is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid. In some embodiments, the blocking primer is further modified to decrease the amplification of undesired nucleic acid. In some embodiments, the modification is introduction of at least one mismatched nucleotide in the primer. In some embodiments, the mismatched nucleotide is 2-18 bp away from the nucleotide with the blocking group. In some embodiments, wherein the mismatched nucleotide is 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 or 17 bp away from the nucleotide with the blocking group. In some embodiments, the mismatched nucleotide base is located on the 5′ side of the nucleotide with the blocking group, in some embodiments, the modification is a modification to decrease the Tm between the blocking primer and the undesired nucleic acid. In some embodiments, the modification is a modification to increase the Tm between the blocking primer and the target nucleic acid. In some embodiments, wherein the modification is a modification to form an extra bridge connecting the 2′ oxygen and 4′ carbon of at least one nucleotide of the blocking primer.


In some embodiments, there are no more than 20 complementary nucleotide pairings and no more than 50% sequence complementarity between any two primers. In some embodiments, there are no more than 19, 18, 17, 16, 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6 or 5 complementary nucleotide pairings between any two primers.


In some embodiments, the reaction mixture comprises at least 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80 90, 100, 120, 140, 160, 180, 200, 250, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900 or 1000 different types of primer pairs.


In some embodiments, each of the primers is 8 to 100 nucleotides in length.


In some embodiments, the different types of primer pairs can complementarily bind to different target nucleic acids or different sequences in the same target nucleic acid.


In some embodiments, wherein the de-blocking agent is CS5 DNA polymerase with the mutations selected from G46E, L329A, Q601R, D640G, I669F, S671F, E678G or the combination of such mutations, ampliTaq or KlenTaq polymerase with F667Y mutation, pyrophosphate or RNase H2.


In some embodiments, the target nucleic acid is single stranded or double stranded DNA.


In some embodiments, the target nucleic acid is double stranded DNA ligated with single or double adaptor tags or single stranded DNA ligated with single adaptor tag.


In some embodiments, the reaction mixture further comprises at least one primer complementary in whole or in part with the adaptor tag.


In some embodiments, the target nucleic acid is double stranded DNA comprising single or double molecular index tag or single stranded DNA comprising single molecular index tag. In some embodiments, the molecular index tag comprises unique identifier nucleic acid sequence and an adaptor tag.


In some embodiments, the primers have common tailing sequence at or near 5′ terminal of the primers. In some embodiments, the common tailing sequence can be used as molecular index tag, sample index tag or adaptor tag or combinations of all three tags.


In some embodiments, the reaction mixture further comprises high fidelity polymerase. In some embodiments, the high fidelity polymerase is PFU DNA Polymerase.


In some embodiments, the step (b) “incubating the reaction mixture under a condition for amplification of the target nucleic acid” comprises the steps of denaturing the target nucleic acid; annealing the primers with the target nucleic acid to allow the formation of a nucleic acid-primer hybrid; and incubating the nucleic acid-primer hybrid to allow the nucleic acid polymerase to amplify the target nucleic acid.


In some embodiments, the formation of a nucleic acid-primer hybrid results in de-blocking the block group in the primer through de-blocking agent.


In some embodiments, the steps of “denaturing the target nucleic acid; annealing the primers with the target nucleic acid to allow the formation of a nucleic acid-primer hybrid; and incubating the nucleic acid-primer hybrid to allow the nucleic acid polymerase to amplify the target nucleic acid” is repeated at least 1 time, 5 times; 10 times, 15 times, 20 times, 2.5 times, 30 times, 35 times, 40 times or 50 times. In some embodiments, the step (b) is repeated from about 20 times to about 50 times.


In some embodiments, the nucleic acid sample comprises the target nucleic acid. In some embodiments, the target nucleic acids in the nucleic acid sample is no more than 1 copy, 2 copies, 5 copies, 8 copies, 10 copies, 20 copies, 30 copies, 50 copies, 80 copies or 100 copies. In some embodiments, the molar percentage of target nucleic acid in the nucleic acid sample is less than 50%, 20%, 10%, 5%, 3%, 1%, 0.5%, 0.1%, 0.05%, 0.01%, 0.005%, or 0.001%.


In some embodiments, the nucleic acid other than the target nucleic acid is not amplified in step (b) substantially. In some embodiments, the molar percentage of undesired nucleic acid in the reaction products obtained from step (b) is less than 20©0 15%, 10%, 5%, 3%, 2% or 1%.


In some embodiments, the method is used for selective enrichment of mutant nucleic acid in a sample comprising wildtype nucleic acid. In some embodiments, wherein at least one blocking primer is complementary to the mutant nucleic acid at the mutant residues and the nucleotide of the blocking primer corresponding to a mutant residue has the blocking group.


Another aspect of the present disclosure provides a method of sequencing a target nucleic acid, wherein the method comprises: (a) providing a reaction mixture comprising: (i) a nucleic acid sample comprising or suspected of comprising the target nucleic acid, (ii) at least 20 different types of primer pairs, wherein at least one primer of each type of primer pairs is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid, and each primer pair has at least one blocking primer comprising a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension, (iii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iv) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polymerase using the blocking primers; (b) incubating the reaction mixture under a condition for amplification of the target nucleic acid; and (c) determining the sequence of the reaction products obtained from step (b).


In some embodiments, the method is used for sequencing by capillary electrophoresis, PCR or high throughput sequencing, In some embodiments, the blocking primer is further modified to decrease the amplification of undesired nucleic acid.


In some embodiments, the reaction mixture further comprises high fidelity polymerase.


Yet another aspect of the present disclosure provides a method of sequencing a target nucleic acid, wherein the method comprises: (a) providing a reaction mixture comprising: (i) a nucleic acid sample comprising or suspected of comprising the target nucleic acid, (ii) at least 20 different types of primer pairs, wherein at least one primer of each type of primer pairs is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid, and each primer pair has at least one blocking primer comprising a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension, (iii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iv) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polymerase using the blocking primers; (b) incubating the reaction mixture under a condition for amplification of the target nucleic acid; (c) adding adaptor tag, molecular index tag and/or sample index tag to the reaction products obtained from step (b); and (d) determining the sequence of the reaction products obtained from step (c).


In some embodiments, the method is used for sequencing by capillary electrophoresis, PCR or high throughput sequencing.


In some embodiments, wherein the blocking primer is modified to decrease the amplification of undesired nucleic acid.


In some embodiments, wherein the reaction mixture further comprises high fidelity polymerase.


Yet another aspect of the present disclosure provides a kit for amplifying a target nucleic acid, wherein the kit comprises: (i) at least 20 different types of primer pairs, wherein at least one primer of each type of primer pairs is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid, and each primer pair has at least one blocking primer comprising a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension, (ii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iii) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polymerase using the blocking primer.


In some embodiments, the blocking primer is modified to decrease the amplification of undesired nucleic acid.


In some embodiments, the reaction mixture further comprises high fidelity polymerase.


Yet another aspect of the present disclosure provides a method of amplifying a target nucleic acid, wherein the method comprises: (a) providing a reaction mixture comprising: (i) a nucleic acid sample comprising or suspected of comprising the target nucleic acid, (ii) at least one type of primers that is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid, and each type of primers has at least one blocking primer comprising a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension, wherein the blocking primer is modified to decrease the amplification of undesired nucleic acid, (iii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iv) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polymerase using the blocking primer; and (b) incubating the reaction mixture under a condition for amplification of the target nucleic acid.


In some embodiments, the modification is introduction of at least one mismatched nucleotide in the primer.


In some embodiments, the mismatched nucleotide is 2-18 bp away from the nucleotide with the blocking group.


In some embodiments, the mismatched nucleotide is 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 or 17 by away from the nucleotide with blocking group.


In some embodiments, the mismatched nucleotide is located on the 5′ side of the blocking group.


In some embodiments, the modification is a modification to decrease the affinity between the blocking primer and the target nucleic acid.


In some embodiments, the modification is a modification to form an extra bridge connecting the 2′ oxygen and 4′ carbon of at least one nucleotide of the blocking primer.


In some embodiments, the method is used for selective enrichment of mutant nucleic acid in a sample comprising wild type nucleic acid.


In some embodiments, a blocking primer is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid. In some embodiments, the blocking primer is complementary to the mutant nucleic acid at the mutant residue and the nucleotide of the blocking primer corresponding to a mutant residue has the blocking group.


Yet another aspect of the present disclosure provides a kit for amplifying a target nucleic acid, wherein the kit comprises: (i) at least one type of primers that is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid, and each type of primers have at least one blocking primer comprising a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension, wherein the blocking primer is modified to decrease the amplification of undesired nucleic acid, (ii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iii) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polymerase using the blocking primer.


In some embodiments, the blocking primer is modified to decrease the affinity between the blocking primer and the target nucleic acid.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE :DRAWINGS


FIG. 1: NGS library construction for genomic DNA by multiplex PCR.



FIG. 2: NGS library construction for fragmented DNA by multiplex PCR.



FIG. 3: NGS library construction for fragmented DNA with single stranded molecular index tag by multiplex PCR.



FIG. 4: NGS library construction for fragmented DNA with double stranded molecular index tags by multiplex PCR.



FIG. 5: Selectively amplification of mutant sequence in genomic)NA by multiplex PCR.



FIG. 6: Mutant enriched NGS library construction for fragmented DNA by multiplex PCR.



FIG. 7: Mutant enriched NGS library construction for fragmented DNA with single stranded molecular index tag by multiplex PCR.



FIG. 8: NGS library construction for fragmented DNA with double stranded molecular index tags by multiplex PCR.



FIG. 9. The normalized reads per amplicon in a 196-plea reaction on a genomic DNA sample across six individual reactions followed by sequencing run on a MiSeq sequencer in Example 1.



FIG. 10. The normalized reads per amplicon v.s. amplicon GC percentage in a 196-plex reaction on a genomic DNA sample across six individual reactions followed by sequencing run on a MiSeq sequencer in Example 1.



FIG. 11. General working flow for multiplex PCR reaction assay design and NGS data analysis.



FIG. 12. Electropherogram of selectively enriched different mutant nucleic acids after multiplex PCR reaction in Example 2.



FIG. 13. Electropherogram of selectively enriched mutant nucleic acid after multiplex PCR reaction in Example 3.



FIG. 14. Electropherogram of selectively enriched mutant nucleic acid after multiplex PCR reaction in Example 4.



FIG. 15. The sketch of multiplex PCR and the construction of library in Example 1.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

One aspect of the present disclosure provides a method of amplifying a target nucleic acid, wherein the method comprises: (a) providing a reaction mixture; and (b) incubating the reaction mixture under a condition for amplification of the target nucleic acid.


Providing a Reaction Mixture


In some embodiments, a reaction mixture for detecting a target nucleic acid of the present disclosure comprises: (i) a nucleic acid sample comprising or suspected of comprising the target nucleic acid, (ii) at least 20 different types of primer pairs, wherein at least one primer of each type of primer pairs is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid, and each primer pair has at least one blocking primer comprising a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension, (iii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iv) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polymerase using the blocking primers.


Nucleic Acid Sample


The term “nucleic acid” as used in the present disclosure refers to a biological polymer of nucleotide bases, and may include but is not limited to deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), ribonucleic acid (RNA), micro RNA (miRNA), and peptide nucleic acid (PNA), modified oligonucleotides (e.g., oligonucleotides comprising nucleotides that are not conventional to biological RNA or DNA, such as 2′-O-methylated oligonucleotides), and the like. The nucleotides of the present disclosure can be natural or unnatural, substituted or unsubstituted, modified or unmodified. The nucleotides can be linked by phosphodiester bonds, or by phosphorothioate linkages, methyiphosphonate linkages, boranophosphate linkages, or the like. The polynucleotides can additionally comprise non-nucleotide elements such as labels, quenchers, blocking groups, or the like. The nucleic acid can be, e.g., single-stranded or double-stranded.


The term “DNA” as used in the present disclosure refers to deoxyribonucleic acid, a long chain polymer biological macromolecule which forms genetic instructions. The subunit of DNA is nucleotide. Each nucleotide in DNA consists of a nitrogenous base, a five-carbon sugar (2-deoxyribose) and phosphate groups. Neighboring nucleotides are linked via diester bonds formed by deoxyribose and phosphoric acid, thereby forming a long chain framework. Generally, there are four types of nitrogenous bases in DNA nucleotides, namely adenine (A), guanine (G), and cytosine (C), thyrnine (T). The bases on the two DNA long chains pair via hydrogen bonds, wherein adenine (A) pairs with thymine (T), and guanine (G) pairs with cytosine (C).


The term “nucleic acid sample” as used in the present disclosure refers to any sample containing nucleic acid, including but not limited to cells, tissues, and body fluids, etc. In some embodiments, the nucleic acid sample is a tissue, e.g., biopsy tissue or paraffin embedded tissue. In some embodiments, the nucleic acid sample is bacteria or animal or plant cells. In some other embodiments, the nucleic acid sample is a body fluid, e.g., blood, plasma, serum, saliva, amniocentesis fluid, pleural effusion, seroperitoneum, etc. In some embodiments, the nucleic acid sample is blood, serum or plasma.


In some embodiments, the nucleic acid sample comprises or is suspected of comprising the target nucleic acid.


The term “target nucleic acid” or “target region” as used in the present disclosure refers to any region or sequence of a nucleic acid which is to be amplified intentionally.


In some specific embodiments, the target nucleic acid is DNA, RNA or a hybrid or a mixture thereof. In some specific embodiments, the target nucleic acid is genomic DNA. In some specific embodiments, the target nucleic acid is cell-free DNA (cfDNA). In some specific embodiments, the target nucleic acid is circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA).


“Cell-free DNA” as used in the present disclosure refers to DNA released from cells and found in circulatory system (e.g., blood), the source of which is generally believed to be genomic DNA released during apoptosis.


“Circulating tumor DNA” as used in the present disclosure refers to the cell-free DNA originated from tumor cells. In human body, a tumor cell may release its genomic DNA into the blood due to causes such as apoptosis and immune responses. Since a normal cell may also release its genomic DNA into the blood, circulating tumor DNA usually constitutes only a very small part of cell-free DNA.


In some embodiments, the target nucleic acid is single stranded or double stranded DNA. In some embodiments, the target nucleic acid is the whole or a portion of one or more genes selected from ABL1, AKT1, ALK, APC, ATM, BRAF, CDH1, CDKN2A, CSF1R, CTNNB1, EGFR, ERBB2, ERBB4, EZH2, FBXW7, FGFR1, FGFR2, FGFR3, FLT3, GNA11, GNAQ, GNAS, HNF1A, HRAS, IDH1, IDH2, JAK2, JAK3, KDR, KIT, KRAS, MET, MLH1, MPL, NOTCH1, NPM1, NRAS, PDGFRA, PIK3CA, PTEN, PTPN11, RB1, RET, SMAD4, SMARCB1, SMO, SRC, STK11, TP53 and VHL.


In some embodiments, the amount of target nucleic acid in the nucleic acid sample is no more than 1 copy, 2 copies, 3 copy, 4 copies, 5 copies, 6 copies, 7 copies, 8 copies, 9 copies, 10 copies, 12 copies, 15 copies, 18 copies, 20 copies, 30 copies, 50 copies, 80 copies or 100 copies. In some embodiments, the molar percentage (molar/molar) of target nucleic acid in the nucleic acid sample is less than 50%, 20%, 105, 8%, 5%, 3%, 1%, 0.5%, 0.1%, 0.05%, 0.01%, 0.005% or 0.001%. In some embodiments, the ratio of molar of target nucleic acid and the molar of un-target nucleic acid in the nucleic acid sample is less than 50%, 20%, 10%, 8%, 6%, 5%, 3%, 1%, 0.5%, 0.1%, 0.05%, 0.01%, 0.005%, or 0.001%.


In some embodiments, the target nucleic acid is DNA fragment. In some embodiments, the size of the target nucleic acid is 0.01-5 kb, 0.1-5 kb, 0.1-1 kb, 1-2 kb, 2-3 kb, 3-4 kb, 4-5 kb, 0.2-0.4 kb, 0.5-1 kb, 0.1-0.5 kb, 0.01-0.5 kb, 0.01-0.4 kb, 0.01-0.3 kb, 0.01-0.25 kb, 0.02-0.25 kb, 0.05-0.3 kb or 0.05-0.25 kb. The DNA fragment can be obtained through common technology in the art (e.g., physical breaking, cleavage using specific restriction endonuclease, etc.).


In some embodiments, the target nucleic acid is double stranded DNA ligated with single or double adaptor tags or single stranded DNA ligated with single adaptor tag.


The term “adaptor tag” as used in the present disclosure refers to a specific DNA sequence attached to one or two ends of a nucleic acid (single stranded or double stranded) according to needs, and the length of the adaptor is usually within 5-50 bp. The adaptor tag can be used to facilitate amplifying the target nucleic acid and/or sequencing the amplified target nucleic acid. In some embodiments, the adaptor tag is used to facilitate the ligation of tags for sequencing (e.g., the ligation of P5 and P7 tag for Illumina MiSeq sequencer). In some embodiments, the adaptor tag is attached to only one end of a single stranded nucleic acid at 3′ terminal or 5′ terminal. In some embodiments, the adaptor tag is attached to two ends of a single stranded nucleic acid. In some embodiments, one adaptor tag is attached to each strand in double stranded nucleic acid at 3′ terminal or 5′ terminal. For example, one adaptor tag is attached to one strand in double stranded nucleic acid at its 3′ terminal and one adaptor tag is attached to the other strand in double stranded nucleic acid at its 5′ terminal, and the two adaptor tags are identical or complementary to each other. In some embodiments, two adaptor tags are attached to two ends of each strand in double stranded nucleic acid.


The adaptor tag can be attached to the nucleic acid through common technologies in the art. in some embodiments, where the target nucleic acid is double stranded DNA, the adaptor tag can he attached to the nucleic acid through the following steps: (a) providing an adaptor ligation nucleic acid designed to contain sequences to ligate with an end of one strand of the DNA (for example, the adaptor ligation nucleic acid contains a hybridization complementary region, or a random hybridization short sequence, e.g., poly-T); (b) hybridization of the adaptor ligation nucleic acid and the strand of the DNA; and (c) adding polymerase (e.g., reverse transcriptase) after the hybridization to extend the adaptor ligation nucleic acid, thereby the adaptor tag is ligated to the end of the target DNA fragment. For attaching another adaptor to the other end of the same strand or to the other strand of the DNA, an adaptor ligation nucleic acid can be designed according to the needs and steps (b)-(c) can be repeated. In some other embodiments, where the DNA fragment is double stranded and the end of the DNA fragment is a sticky end, the adaptor tag can be attached to the nucleic acid through the following steps: (a) designing the adaptor ligation nucleic acid to contain sequences to ligate with the sticky end; (b) complementarily annealing the adaptor ligation nucleic acid with the sticky end; and (c) ligating the adaptor ligation nucleic acid to the double stranded of the target DNA using a ligase, thereby achieving the purpose of attaching the adapter to the end of the DNA fragment.


In some embodiments, the target nucleic acid is double stranded DNA comprising single or double molecular index tags or single stranded DNA comprising single molecular index tag. In some embodiments, the molecular index tag comprises unique identifier nucleic acid sequence and an adaptor tag. In some embodiments, the adaptor tag is at one end of the target nucleic acid.


The term“molecular index tag” as used in the present disclosure refers to a nucleic acid sequence used as a tag, which can be ligated to or existing at the 5′ end, the 3′ end or both ends of a DNA fragment. In DNA sequencing, especially in high throughout sequencing technology, a molecular index tag therein is used to mark particular DNA molecule. After amplification and sequencing, the count of the molecular index sequence therein is used to mark particular DNA molecule and can be the basis for determining the quantity of expression of the marked gene, or be used to trace the information of the amplified DNA molecules from the same original molecules and thereby correcting the random errors of DNA sequences during amplification and sequencing.


In some embodiments, the molecular index tag is exogenous, which is attached to the target nucleic acid through PCR (e.g., as described in MoCloskey M. L. et al, Encoding PCR products with batch-stamps and barcodes. Biochem Genet 45:761-767, 2014 or Parameswaran P, et al., A pyrosequencing-tailored nucleotide barcode design unveils opportunities for large-scale sample multiplexing. Nucleic Acids Res 35:e130, 2017) or ligation (e.g., as described in Craig D W, et al., Identification of genetic variants using bar-coded multiplexed sequencing. Nat Methods 5:887-893, 2008 or Miner B E, et al, Molecular barcodes detect redundancy and contamination in hairpin-bisulfite PCR. Nucleic Acids Res 32:e135, 2004). In some embodiments, the molecular index tag or the unique identifier nucleic acid sequence therein can be a random sequence (i.e., formed with randomly arranged A/T/C/G).


In some embodiments, the molecular index tag or the unique identifier nucleic acid sequence therein is endogenous, which are the sequences of the two ends of randomly sheared fragment.


More information for molecular index tag can be found in U.S. 20140227705 and U.S. 20150044687.


Primer


The term “primer” as used in the present disclosure refers to an oligonucleotide that is capable of acting as a point of initiation of synthesis when placed under conditions in which primer extension is initiated. Primer may comprise natural ribonucleic acid, deoxyribonucleic acid, or other forms of natural nucleic acid. Primer may also comprise un-natural nucleic acid (e.g., LNA, ZNA etc.).


Primers may be prepared using any suitable method, such as, for example, the phosphotriester and phosphodiester methods or automated embodiments thereof In one such automated embodiment, diethylophosphoramidites are used as starting materials and may be synthesized as described by Beaucage et al., Tetrahedron Letters, 22:1859-1862 (1981). One method for synthesizing primer on a modified solid support is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,458,006. It is also possible to use a primer which has been isolated from a biological source, such as a restriction endonuclease digest. In some embodiments, the primer with blocking nucleotide at the 3′ end, can be synthesized with terminal transferase (Gibco BRL) (Nuc Aci Res 2002, 30(2)).


The term “primer pair” as used in the present disclosure refers to a pair of primers consisting of a forward primer and a reverse primer which complement with a portion of a sequence to be amplified, respectively, wherein the forward primer defines a point of initiation of the amplified sequence and the reverse primer defines a point of termination of the amplified sequence. The term “complimentary”, when it is used to describe the relationship between primer and the sequence to be amplified, refers to that the primer is complimentary to the sequence to be amplified or is complimentary to a complementary sequence of the sequence to be amplified.


The pair of primers can be designed based on the sequence of the target nucleic acid. In some embodiments, at least one primer of each type of primer pairs is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid. in some embodiments, when the target sequence (assuming it is a double stranded DNA) has an adaptor tag, one primer of a primer pair may be complementary to a portion of the target sequence (on one strand) and the other primer may be complementary to the adaptor tag (on the other strand).


In some embodiments, each primer pair has at least one blocking primer comprising a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension. In some embodiments, both primers in each primer pair are blocking primers comprising a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension.


The term “blocking primer” as used in the present disclosure refers to a primer having a blocking group.


The term “blocking group” as used in the present disclosure refers to any chemical group covalently linked in a nucleic acid chain and capable of blocking polymerase extension. in some embodiments, the nucleotide with blocking group is a modified nucleotide at or near the 3′ terminal of each blocking primer. In some embodiments, the nucleotide with blocking group is no more than 6 bp, 5 bp, 4 bp, 3 bp, 2 bp or 1 bp away from the 3′ terminal of each blocking primer. In some embodiments, when the method of the present disclosure is used for selective enrichment of mutant nucleic acid in a sample comprising wildtype nucleic acid, the blocking group is at the nucleotide that is complementary with the corresponding mutated nucleotide of the mutant nucleic acid but is not complementary with the corresponding nucleotide of wildtype nucleic acid.


In some embodiments, the blocking group is 2′, 3′-dideoxynucleotide, ribonucleotide residue, 2′, 3′SH nucleotide, or 2′-O—PO3 nucleotide. When the blocking group is a ribonucleotide residue, the blocking primer is a primer that has one ribonucleotide residue and other residues are all deoxyribonucleotide residues.


More information for blocking group and blocking primer can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,133,491, 6,534,269 and Joseph R.D. et al., RNase H-dependent PCR (rhPCR): improved specificity and single nucleotide polymorphism detection using blocked cleavable primers, BMC Biotechnology 11:80, 2011.


In some embodiments, the blocking primer is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid.


In some embodiments, the primers are 5 to 100 nucleotides in length. In some embodiments, the primers are at least 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35 or 40 nucleotides in length. In some embodiments, the primers are no more than 100, 90, 80, 70, 60, 50, 40, 35, 30, 25 or 20 nucleotides in length.


In some embodiments, a primer comprises a complementary region that is complementary to the target sequence and a common tailing sequence at or near the 5′ terminal of the primer. In some embodiments, the common tailing sequence can be used as molecular index tag, adaptor tag or sample index tag or combinations of all the three tags.


The term “sample index tag” as used in the present disclosure refers to a series of unique nucleotides (i.e., each sample index tag is unique), and can be used to allow for multiplexing of samples such that each sample can be identified based on its sample index tag. In some embodiments, there is a unique sample index tag for each sample in a set of samples, and the samples are pooled during sequencing. For example, if twelve samples are pooled into a single sequencing reaction, there are at least twelve unique sample index tags such that each sample is labeled uniquely.


In some embodiments, the blocking primer is modified so as to further decrease the amplification of undesired nucleic acid.


In some embodiments, the modification is introduction of at least one mismatched nucleotide in the primer, In some embodiments, the mismatched nucleotide base is located on the 5′ side of the nucleotide with the blocking group.


The term “mismatched nucleotide” as used in the present disclosure refers to a nucleotide of a first nucleic acid (e.g., primer) that is not capable of pairing with a nucleotide at a corresponding position of a second nucleic acid (e.g., target nucleic acid), when the first and second nucleic acids are aligned.


The preferred or accepted location of the mismatched nucleotide can be determined through conventional technologies. For example, the mismatched nucleotides are introduced into different locations in the blocking primer, and those blocking primers are used for amplifying a target nucleic acid separately, and then the preferred or accepted location of the mismatched nucleotide for the target nucleic acid can be determined based on the results of amplification (e.g., the location decreasing the amplification of undesired nucleic acid or false positive results is preferred or accepted location). The location of the mismatched nucleotide may change along with the change of the target nucleic acid or the structure of the blocking primer. In some embodiments, the mismatched nucleotide is 2-18 bp away from the nucleotide with blocking group. in some embodiments, the mismatched nucleotide is 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 or 17 bp away from the nucleotide with blocking group. In some embodiments, the mismatched nucleotide is no less than 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 or 10 by away from the nucleotide with blocking group. In some embodiments, the mismatched nucleotide is no more than 17, 16, 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3 or 2 bp away from the nucleotide with blocking group.


In some embodiments, the modification is a modification to increase the melting temperature (Tm) between the blocking primer and the target nucleic. In some embodiments, the modification is a modification to decrease the melting temperature (Tm) between the blocking primer and the undesired nucleic acid which may be the wildtype nucleic acid in a method for selective enrichment of mutant nucleic acid in a sample. In some embodiments, wherein the modification is a modification to form an extra bridge connecting the 2′ oxygen and 4′ carbon of at least one nucleotide of the blocking primer, such as locked nucleic acid (LNA), see, e.g., Karkare S et al., Promising nucleic acid analogs and mimics: characteristic features and applications of PNA, LNA, and morpholino. Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 71(5):575-586. 2006 and Vester B et al., LNA (locked nucleic acid): high-affinity targeting of complementary RNA and DNA. Biochemistry 43(12):13233-13241, 2004.


In some embodiments, the reaction mixture comprises at least 20, 25, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, 120, 140, 160, 180, 200, 250, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900 or 1000 different types of primer pairs. In some embodiments, the different types of pairs of the primers are complementary to different target nucleic acid fragments or are complementary to different sequences in the same target nucleic acid fragment.


The inventors of the present disclosure conducted a simulation experiment to evaluate the probability of forming primer pairs between primers with certain lengths generated randomly. The inventors randomly generated from 10 to 490 primer pairs in length of 20 bp to form different primer pools and, for each pool, checked primer dimer formation between any one primer and other primer in the same pool. It can be seen that the probability to form primer dimer (e.g., resulting from complementarily between different primers) is increased along with the increasing numbers of primers.









TABLE 1







Relationship between the number of the primers


and the dimer length.










Number of
Dimer Length














Primer Pairs
4 bp
5 bp
6 bp
7 bp
8 bp


















10
100%
 90%
 20%
 0%
 0%



30
100%
100%
 67%
 7%
 7%



50
100%
100%
 88%
22%
 0%



70
100%
100%
 94%
50%
20%



90
100%
100%
 96%
48%
 9%



110
100%
100%
100%
72%
13%



130
100%
100%
 99%
61%
23%



150
100%
100%
 99%
72%
23%



170
100%
100%
100%
79%
29%



190
100%
100%
 99%
77%
32%



210
100%
100%
100%
82%
31%



230
100%
100%
100%
83%
34%



250
100%
100%
100%
87%
34%



270
100%
100%
100%
91%
35%



290
100%
100%
100%
90%
39%



310
100%
100%
100%
96%
49%



330
100%
100%
100%
96%
47%



350
100%
100%
100%
96%
51%



370
100%
100%
100%
95%
48%



390
100%
100%
100%
96%
53%



410
100%
100%
100%
97%
52%



430
100%
100%
100%
97%
54%



450
100%
100%
100%
97%
54%



470
100%
100%
100%
98%
59%



490
100%
100%
100%
98%
63%










For the data in Table 1, 100% means that each primer in a primer pool forms a dimer with at leak one of the other primers in the same primer pool and the length of the dimer is no shorter than the indicated number; 20% means that 20% of the primers in a primer pool forms dimers in the primer pool and the length of the dimer is no shorter than the indicated number.









TABLE 2







Relationship between the number of the primers


and the dimer length in the 3' terminal of the primer










Numbers of
Dimer Length














Primer Pairs
4 bp
5 bp
6 bp
7 bp
8 bp


















10
 50%
 10%
 0%
 0%
 0%



30
 90%
 50%
13%
 7%
 7%



50
 98%
 56%
26%
 2%
 0%



70
 97%
 67%
23%
 7%
 0%



90
100%
 80%
33%
12%
 6%



110
100%
 88%
50%
 7%
 3%



130
100%
 82%
40%
10%
 4%



150
100%
 91%
41%
13%
 2%



170
100%
 95%
49%
15%
 4%



190
100%
 94%
54%
15%
 3%



210
100%
 94%
50%
14%
 3%



230
100%
 97%
59%
20%
 6%



250
100%
 99%
58%
21%
 7%



270
100%
100%
69%
23%
 6%



290
100%
 99%
65%
19%
 5%



310
100%
 99%
67%
22%
 6%



330
100%
 99%
70%
24%
 4%



350
100%
100%
71%
25%
 7%



370
100%
100%
73%
26%
 6%



390
100%
100%
73%
27%
 7%



410
100%
100%
75%
31%
10%



430
100%
100%
77%
36%
 8%



450
100%
100%
79%
34%
 7%



470
100%
100%
81%
31%
 9%



490
100%
100%
82%
36%
 9%










For the data in Table 2, 100% means that each primer in a primer pool forms a dimer from its 3′ terminal with at least one of other primers in the same primer pool and the length of the dimer is no shorter than the indicated number; 10% means that 10% of the primers in a primer pool forms dimers in the primer pool and the length of the dimer is no shorter than the indicated number.


In some embodiments, there are no more than 20 complementary nucleotide pairings between any two primers, In some embodiments, there are no more than 19, 18, 17, 16, 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6 or 5 complementary nucleotide pairing between any two primers. In some embodiments, there are no more than 20 consecutive complementary nucleotide pairings between any two primers. In some embodiments, there are no more than 19, 18, 17, 16, 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6 or 5 consecutive complementary nucleotide pairings between any two primers. In some embodiments, the above mentioned complementary nucleotides pairings are within a region from the 1st nucleotide at the 3′ terminal of a primer to the 20th, 19th, 18th, 17th, 16th, 15th, 14th, 13th, 12th, 11th, 10th, 9th or 8th nucleotide from the 3′ terminal of the primer. In some embodiments, there are no more than 7, 6 or 5 consecutive complementary nucleotide pairings within a region from the 1st nucleotide at the 3′ terminal of a primer to the 20th, 19th, 18th, 17th, 16th, 15th, 14th, 13th, 12th, 11th, 10th, 9thor 8th nucleotide from the 3′ terminal of the primer. In some embodiments, when calculating the number of parings between two primers, the common tailing sequence is not counted.


In some embodiments, there are no more than 20 complementary nucleotide pairings and no more than 50% sequence complementarity between any two primers. In some embodiments, there are no more than 19, 18, 17, 16, 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6 or 5 complementary nucleotide pairings and no more than 45%, 40%, 35%, 30%, 25% or 20% sequence complementarity between any two primers. In some embodiments, when calculating the percent complementarity between two primers, the common tailing sequence is not counted.


The term “nucleotide complementarity” or “complementarity” when in reference to nucleotide as used in the present disclosure refers to a nucleotide on a nucleic acid chain is capable of base pairing with another nucleotide on another nucleic acid chain. For example, in DNA, adenine (A) is complementary to thymine (T), and guanine (G) is complementary to cytosine (C). For another example, in RNA, adenine (A) is complementary to uracil (U), and guanine (G) is complementary to cytosine (C).


The term “percent complementarity” as used in the present disclosure refers to the percentage of nucleotide residues in a nucleic acid molecule that have complementarity with nucleotide residues of another nucleic acid molecule when the two nucleic acid molecules are annealed. Percent complementarity is calculated by dividing the number of nucleotides of the first nucleic acid that are complementary to nucleotides at corresponding positions in the second nucleic acid by the total length of the first nucleic acid.


Percent complementarity of a nucleic acid or the number of nucleotides of a nucleic acid that is complementary to another nucleic acid can also be determined routinely using BLAST programs (basic local alignment search tools) and PowerBLAST programs known in the art (Altschul et al., J. Mol. Biol., 215, 403-410, 1990; Zhang and Madden, Genome Res., 7, 649-656, 1997).


For example, primer 1 in which 18 of 20 nucleotides of the primer 1 have complementarity with 18 nucleotides of primer 2 would have 90% sequence complementarity. In this example, the complementary nucleotides may be contiguous to each other or interspersed with non-complementary nucleotides.


The term “x nucleotide pairings” as used in the present disclosure refers to the number of nucleotide residues in a nucleic acid molecule that has complementarity with the corresponding nucleotides of another nucleic acid molecule when the two nucleic acid molecules are annealed. For example, “18 nucleotide pairings” means 18 nucleotide residues of a first nucleic acid molecule has complementarity with 18 nucleotide residues of a second nucleic acid molecule. In this example, the complementary nucleotides may be contiguous to each other or interspersed with non-complementary nucleotides.


Nucleic Acid Polymerase


In some embodiments, the nucleic acid polymerase may be selected from the family of DNA polymerases like E. coli DNA polymerase I (such as E. coli DNA polymerase I, Taq DNA polymerase, Tth DNA polymerase, TfI DNA polymerase and others). This polymerase may contain the naturally occurring wild-type sequences or modified variants and fragments thereof.


In some embodiments, the nucleic add polymerase may be selected from modified DNA polymerases of the family of DNA polymerases like E. coli DNA polymerase I, e.g., N-terminal deletions of the DNA polymerases, such as Klenow fragment of E. coli DNA polymerase I, N-terminal deletions of Taq polymerase (including the Stoffel fragment of Taq DNApolymerase, Klentaq-235, and Klentaq-278) and others.


In some embodiments, the nucleic acid polymerase includes, but is not limited to, thermostable DNA polymerases. Examples of thermostable DNA polymerases include, but are not limited to: Tth DNA polymerase, TfI DNA polymerase, Taq DNA polymerase, N-terminal deletions of Taq polymerase (e.g., Stoffel fragment of DNA polymerase, Klentaq-235, and Klentaq-278). Other DNA polymerases include KlenTaqi, Taquenase™ (Amersham), Ad-vanlaq™ (Clontech), GoTaq, GoTaq Flexi (Promega), and KlenTaq-S DNA polymerase.


In some embodiments, the nucleic acid polymerase may be commercially available DNA polymerase mixtures, including but are not limited to, TaqLA, TthLA or Expand High Fidelitypius Enzyme Blend (Roche); TthXL Klen TaqLA (Perkin-Elmer); ExTaq® (Takara Shuzo); Elongase® (Life Technologies); Advantage™ KlenTaq, Advantage™ Tth and Advantage2™ (Clontech); TaqExtender™ (Stratagene); Expand™ Long Template and Expand™ High Fidelity (Boehringer Mannheim); and TripleMaster™ Enzyme Mix (Eppendorf).


For further decreasing the amplification of undesired nucleic acid, one or more additional polymerase can be added into the reaction mixture. In some embodiments, the reaction mixture comprises high fidelity polymerase. In some embodiments, the high fidelity polymerase is PFU DNA Polymerase, Klentaq-1, Vent, or Deep Vent.


De-Blocking Agent


De-blocking agent can be selected according to the blocking group contained in the blocking primer. De-blocking agent can be any agent that may result in de-blocking the block group in the blocking primer under the condition of amplifying the target nucleic acid, when the nucleotide with the blocking group in the blocking primer is complementary to the corresponding nucleotide in the target nucleic acid. In some embodiments, the de-blocking agent is pyrophosphate, CS5 DNA polymerase with the mutations selected from G46E, L329A, Q601R, D640G, I669F, S671F, E678G or the combination thereof. In some embodiments, the de-blocking agent is ampliTaq or KlenTaq polymerase with F667Y mutation, or RNase H2.


In some embodiments, the de-blocking agent is pyrophosphate, when the blocking group is 2′, 3′-dideoxynucleotide. In some embodiments, the de-blocking agent is CS5 DNA polymerase with the mutations selected from G46E, L329A, Q601R, D640G, I669F, S671F, E678G or the combination thereof (e.g., those DNA polymerases shown in U.S. 20070154914), when the blocking group is 2′-O—PO3 nucleotide. In some embodiments, the blocking group is 2′-O—PO3 nucleotide and the de-blocking agent is ampliTaq or KlenTaq polymerase with F667Y mutation, when the blocking group is 2′-O—PO3 nucleotide. In some embodiments, the de-blocking agent is RNase H2, when the blocking group is ribonucleotide residue.


Step of Incubating the Reaction Mixture Under a Condition for Amplification of the Target Nucleic Acid


Incubation of the reaction mixture of the present disclosure can be conducted in a multi-cycle process employing several alternating heating and cooling steps to amplify the DNA (see U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,683,202 and 4,683,195). In some embodiments, the incubation comprises the steps of denaturing the target nucleic acid; annealing the primers with the target nucleic acid to allow the formation of a target nucleic acid-primer hybrid; and incubating the target nucleic acid-primer hybrid to allow the nucleic acid polymerase to amplify the target nucleic acid.


An example of amplification process is briefly described below. First, a reaction mixture is heated to a temperature sufficient to denature the double stranded target DNA into its two single strands. The temperature of the reaction mixture is then decreased to allow specific single stranded primers to anneal to their respective complementary single-stranded target DNA. Following the annealing step, the temperature is maintained or adjusted to a temperature optimum of the DNA polymerase being used, which allows incorporation of complementary nucleotides at the 3′ ends of the annealed oligonucleotide primers thereby recreating double stranded target DNA. Using a heat-stable DNA polymerase, the cycle of denaturing, annealing and extension may be repeated as many times as necessary to generate a desired product, without the addition of polymerase after each heat denaturation (see “Current Protocols in Molecular Biology”, F. M. Ausubel et al., John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1998).


In some embodiments, denaturing the target nucleic acid is conducted at about 90° C.-100° C. for from about 10 seconds to 10 minutes, preferably for the first circle for from about 1 to 8 minutes. In some embodiments, annealing the primers with the target nucleic acid is conducted at about 5° C.-60° C. for from about 3 seconds to 10 minutes. In some embodiments, incubating the nucleic acid-primer hybrid to allow the nucleic acid polymerase to amplify the target nucleic acid is conducted at about 60° C.-90° C. for from about 1 minute to 15 minutes.


In some embodiments, the incubation step is repeated at least 1 time, 5 times, 10 times, 15 times, 20 times, 25 times, 30 times, 35 times or 40 times. In some embodiments, the incubation step is repeated from about 20 times to about 50 times.


In some embodiments, the nucleic acid other than the target nucleic acid is not amplified in step (b) substantially. In some embodiments, the molar percentage of undesired nucleic acid in the product obtained after the incubation step is less than 20%, 15%, 10%, 5%, 3%, 2% or 1%.


The amplification method of the present disclosure can be used to construct DNA sequencing library. In some embodiments, the product obtained from the incubation step can be used as DNA sequencing library directly without enzyme digestion to reduce undesired amplification product. In some embodiments, the product obtained from the incubation step can be used as DNA sequencing library after the ligation of adaptor tags, but without enzyme digestion to reduce undesired amplification product.


“DNA sequencing library” as described in the present disclosure refers to a collection of DNA segments, in an abundance that can be sequenced, wherein one end or both ends of each segment in the collection of DNA segments contains a specific sequence partly or completely complementary to the primers used in sequencing, and thereby can be directly used in the subsequent DNA sequencing.


Some examples for construction of DNA sequencing library are shown in FIGS. 1-4 and 6-7.


In some embodiments, the method is used for selective enrichment of mutant nucleic acid in a sample comprising wildtype and mutant nucleic acid.


Some examples for selective enrichment of mutant nucleic acid are shown in FIG. 5-7.


Another aspect of the present disclosure provides method of sequencing a target nucleic acid, wherein the method comprises: (a) providing a reaction mixture comprising: (i) a nucleic acid sample, (ii) at least 20 different pairs of primers, wherein at least one primer of each primer pair is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid and comprises a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension (“blocking primer”), (iii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iv) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polym erase; (b) incubating the reaction mixture under a condition for amplification of the target nucleic acid; (c) determining the sequence of the products obtained from step (b).


The terms “sequencing” as used in the present disclosure refers to any and all biochemical methods that may be used to determine the identity and order of nucleotide bases including but not limited to adenine, guanine, cytosine and thymine, in one or more molecules of DNA. In some embodiments, the method is use for sequencing by capillary electrophoresis, PCR or high throughput sequencing (e.g., next-generation sequencing (NGS)).


Yet another aspect of the present disclosure provides a method of sequencing a target nucleic acid, wherein the method comprises: (a) providing a reaction mixture comprising: (i) a nucleic acid sample, (ii) at least 20 different pairs of primers, wherein at least one primer of each primer pairs is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid and comprises a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension (“blocking primer”), (iii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iv) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polymerase; (b) incubating the reaction mixture under a condition for amplification of the target nucleic acid; (c) adding adaptor tag, molecular index tag and/or sample index tag to the product obtained from step (b); (d) determining the sequence of the products obtained from step (c).


In some embodiments, in the step (c), adaptor tag, molecular index tag and/or sample index tag is attached to the target nucleic acid obtained from step (b). The adaptor tag, molecular index tag and/or sample index tag can be attached according to the method mentioned above.


Yet another aspect of the present disclosure provides a kit of amplifying a target nucleic acid, wherein the kit comprises: (i) at least 20 different pairs of primers, wherein at least one primer of each primer pairs is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid and comprises a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension, (ii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iii) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polymerase.


In some embodiments, the kit further comprises one or more agents selected from dNTPs, Mg2+ (e.g., MgCl2), Bovin Serum Albumin, pH butler (e.g., Tris HCL), glycerol, DNase inhibitor, RNase, SO42, Cl, K+, Ca2+, Na+, and (NH4)+.


In some embodiments, the kit further comprises an instruction showing how to conduct the amplification of the target nucleic acid (such as showing those methods of the present disclosure).


Yet another aspect of the present disclosure provides a method of amplifying a target nucleic acid, wherein the method comprises: (a) providing a reaction mixture comprising: (i) a nucleic acid sample, (ii) at least one primer that is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid and comprises a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension (“blocking primer”), wherein the blocking primer is modified so as to decrease the amplification of undesired nucleic acid, (iii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iv) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polymerase; (b) incubating the reaction mixture under a condition for amplification of the target nucleic acid.


Yet another aspect of the present disclosure provides a kit of amplifying a target nucleic acid, wherein the kit comprises: (i) at least one primer that is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid and comprises a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension (“blocking primer”), wherein the blocking primer is modified so as to decrease the amplification of undesired nucleic acid, (ii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iii) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polymerase.


Any embodiment following any aspect of the present disclosure can be applied to other aspects of the present disclosure, as long as the resulted embodiments are possible or reasonable for a person skilled in the art.


It is understood that as used herein and in the appended claims, the singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” include the plural reference unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Thus, for example, a reference to a “bridge probe” is a reference to one or more bridge probes, and includes equivalents thereof known to those skilled in the art and so forth.


All publications and patents cited in this specification are herein incorporated by reference to their entirety.


EXAMPLES

The invention will be more readily understood with reference to the following examples, which are not to be interpreted in any way as limiting the scope of the invention. All specific compositions, materials, and methods described below, in whole or in part, fall within the scope of the invention. These specific compositions, materials, and methods are not intended to limit the invention, but merely to illustrate specific embodiments falling within the scope of the invention. One skilled in the art may develop equivalent compositions, materials, and methods without the exercise of inventive capacity and without departing from the scope of the invention. It will be understood that many variations can be made in the procedures herein described while still remaining within the bounds of the invention. It is the intention of the inventors that such variations are included within the scope of the invention.


Example 1. Multiplex PCR Amplification of Genomic DNA Target

A multiplex polymerase chain reaction was performed to selectively amplify 196 amplicons (the products amplified from target nucleic acid regions) across human genomic DNA. Each primer pair contains two primers with dideoxynucleoside terminated at its 3′ end and can selectively hybridize target nucleic acid. The sequence of each primer pair is shown in Table 3. The boldfaced sequences in each primer are the sequences for the following step of the library construction and other sequences in each primer are the sequences for selectively hybridizing target nucleic acid.









TABLE 3







Amplicons and corresponding primer pairs















Forward_

Reverse_




Assay_
Target_
Primer_
Forward_ 
Primer_
Reverse_



ID
Gene
ID
Primer
ID
Primer_
Chr
















1
PDGFR
IF

ACACTCTTTCCCT

1R

GTGACTGGAGT

4



A


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAAAACA



TCTTCCGATCTCA







AGCTCTCATGTCT

TGTGGTTGTGAA






GAACT

AACTGTTCAA






2
CDKN2
2F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

2R

GTGACTGGAGT

9



A


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCATGGT



TCTTCCGATCTC







TACTGCCTCTGGT

ACCAGCGTGTCC






G

AGGAA






3
SMAR
3F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

3R

GTGACTGGAGT

22



CB1


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC







CCGATCTACATGG


TCTTCCGATCTG







AGATCGATGGGC

CTGCCTGTCAGG






A

CAGAT






4
TP53
4F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

4R

GTGACTGGAGT

17






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCBGAGG



TCTTCCGATCTG







TCACTCACCTGG

GGGAGAAGTAA








GTATATACacagt






5
RB1
5F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

5R

GTGACTGGAGT

13






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAGAACA



TCTTCCGATCTAT







AAACCATGTAATA

TGTAACAGCATA






AAATTCTGA

CAAGGATCTTCC






6
SMAD
6F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

6R

GTGACTGGAGT

18



4


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTCATTT



TCTTCCGATCTG







GTTTTCCCCTTTAA

AGTAATGGTAGG






ACAATTA

TAATCTGTTTCTT








AC






7
ATM
7F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

7R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGAGGG



TCTTCCGATCTA







TACCAGAGACAGT

ATTTTTATGTACT








TTTCATTCCCTGA








A






8
RB1
8F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

8R

GTGACTGGAGT

13






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTYTGTTAT



TCTTCCGATCTCT







TTAGTTTTGAAAC

CCACACACTCCA






ACAGAGAA

GTTAGGTA






9
ATM
9F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

9R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCTATGC



TCTTCCGATCTG







AAGATACACAGTA

TGCACTGAAAGA






AAGGTTC

GGATCGT






10
KDR
10F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

10R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTCTGA



TCTTCCGATCTG







CAAGAGCATGCCA

GTTTCAGATCCA






TAG

CAGGGATTG






11
JAK3
11F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

HR

GTGACTGGAGT

19






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCCACCT



TCTTCCGATCTG







GATTGCATGCCA

GCACTTCTCCAG








CCCAA






12
PIK3CA
12F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

12R

GTGACTGGAGT

3






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGACRA



TCTTCCGATCTA







AGAACAGCTCAA

CTGAATTTGGCT






AGC

GATCTCAGC






13
NPM1
13F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

13R

GTGACTGGAGT

5






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTATGTCTA



TCTTCCGATCTA







TGAAGTGTTGTGG

AAATTTTCCGTC






TTCC

TTATTTCATTTCT








GT






14
RET
14F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

14R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGGTCNG



TCTTCCGATCTA







ATTCCAGTTAAAT

CGCAAAGTGATG






GG

TGTAAGTGTG






15
FGFR1
15F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

15R

GTGACTGGAGT

8






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTACCCTG



TCTTCCGATCTG







CTTGCAGGATGG

CAGTGATGGGTT








GTAAACCTC






16
FLT3
16F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

16R

GTGACTGGAGT

13






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTATTTTC



TCTTCCGATCTG







GTGGAAGTGGGT

CTTCCCAGCTGG






TACC

GTCAT






17
RB1
17F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

17R

GTGACTGGAGT

13






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGTGGT



TCTTCCGATCTA







TTTAATTTCATCAT

CTGCAGCAGATA






GTTTCATA

TGTAAGCAAAA






18
MLH1
18F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

18R

GTGACTGGAGT

3






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAAGTAG



TCTTCCGATCTA







TGATAAGGTCTAT

GACAGATATTTC






GCCCA

TAGTGGCAGGG






19
SMAD
19F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

19R

GTGACTGGAGT

18



4


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCCTGTT



TCTTCCGATCTTT







CACAATGAGCTTG

TCCTGTATTTAGA






CA

TTGATTTAGTGG








T



20
CDH1
20F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

20R

GTGACTGGAGT

16






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCGACA



TCTTCCGATCTG







CCCGATTCAAAGT

GTTTCATAACCC






G

ACAGATCCAT






21
ATM
21F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

21R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGCYTT



TCTTCCGATCTTT







CTGGCTGGATTTA

TTTGGTTTTTAA






AAT

AATTAATGTTGG








CA






22
PTEN
22F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

22R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGCRTGC



TCTTCCGATCTT







AGATAATGACAAG

GACTTGTATGTAT






GAA

GTGATGTGTG






23
AKT1
23F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

23R

GTGACTGGAGT

14






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCGCCAC



TCTTCCGATCTG







AGAGAAGTTGTT

TGAGAGCCACG






GAG

CACACT






24
FGFR3
24F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

24R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTgCCCCT



TCTTCCGATCTG







GAGCGTCATCTG

AGTTCCACTGCA








AGGTGT






25
RET
25F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

25R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTCTGT



TCTTCCGATCTC







GCTGCATTTCAGA

CACCCACATGTC






GA

ATCAAAT






26
ATM
26F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

26R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGATGAG



TCTTCCGATCTTC







AAAYTCTCAGGAA

AGGAAGTCACT






ACTCTGT

GATGTGAAG






27
FLT3
27F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

27R

GTGACTGGAGT

13






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTCCATT



TCTTCCGATCTA







CTTACCAAACTCT

CCTAAATTGCTT






AAATTTTC

CAGAGATGAAA






28
KRAS
28F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

28R

GTGACTGGAGT

12






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGCAGAA



TCTTCCGATCTTT







AACAGATCTGTAT

CCTACTAGGACC






TTATTTCA

ATAGGTACA






29
STK11
29F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

29R

GTGACTGGAGT

19






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTGCCC



TCTTCCGATCTCA







GCAGGTACTTCT

TTGTGCACAAGG








ACATCAAG






30
FLT3
30F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

30R

GTGACTGGAGT

13






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGGGTA



TCTTCCGATCTTA







TCCATCCGAGAAA

GAAAAGAACGT






CA

GTGAAATAAGCT






31
ABL1
31F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

31R

GTGACTGGAGT

9






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGCAACA



TCTTCCGATCTG







AGCCCACTGTCTA

AAGAAATACAGC






TG

CTGACGGTG






32
VHL
32F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

32R

GTGACTGGAGT

3






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCCCAGG



TCTTCCGATCTG







TCATCTTCTGCAAT

GCATCCACAGCT






C

ACCGA






33
ATM
33F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

33R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAAAGAT



TCTTCCGATCTT







CACCTTCAGAAGT

GTTACCATTTTCT






CACAG

CATTCAGTGTCA








T






34
KDR
34F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

34R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTATTTTAT



TCTTCCGATCTG







TTCCTCCCTGGAA

TCAAGAGTAAG






GTCC

GAAAAGATTCAG








ACT






35
FGFR2
35F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

35R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCACCA



TCTTCCGATCTTC







TCCTGTGTGCAGG

TCCATCTCTGAC








ACCAGA






36
NRAS
36F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

36R

GTGACTGGAGT

1






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCATGTAT



TCTTCCGATCTTT







TGGTCTCTCATGG

CAATTTTTATTAA






CAC

AAACCACAGGG








A






37
ERB34
37F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

37R

GTGACTGGAGT

2






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTACCAGT



TCTTCCGATCTA







GACTAGAAAGATC

GAAACAAGACT






AAATTCC

CAGAGTTAGGG








G






38
RB1
38F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

38R

GTGACTGGAGT

13






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGACAT



TCTTCCGATCTA







GTAAAGGATAATT

AAGATCTAGATG






GTCAGTGAC

CAAGATTATTTTT








GG






39
SMO
39F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

39R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGTGCAG



TCTTCCGATCTC







AACATCAAGTTCA

AGGACATGCAC






ACAGT

AGCTACATC






40
PIK3C
40F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

40R

GTGACTGGAGT

3



A


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTAGGTG



TCTTCCGATCTG







GAATGAATGGCTG

AAAGGGTGCTA






AATTA

AAGAGGTAAAG






41
KRAS
41F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

41R

GTGACTGGAGT

12






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTCGTC



TCTTCCGATCTC







CACAAAATGATTC

AGTCATTTTCAG






TGAATTAG

CAGGCCTTATA






42
SMAD
42F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

42.R

GTGACTGGAGT

18



4


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGGYGT



TCTTCCGATCTT







TCCATTGCTTACTT

GTCCACAGGAC






T

AGAAGC






43
PIK3C
43F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

43R

GTGACTGGAGT

3



A


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTCCATA



TCTTCCGATCTT







CTACTCATGAGGT

GAAAGACGATG






GTTTATTC

GACAAGTAATGG






44
RB1
44F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

44R

GTGACTGGAGT

13






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAGAAG



TCTTCCGATCTA







GCAACTTGACAA

ATAATTGAAGAA






GAGAAAT

ATTCATTCATGTG








CA






45
CSF1R
45F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

45R

GTGACTGGAGT

5






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTCTGC



TCTTCCGATCTC







TCAGAGCTCAAGT

CTGAGCAGCTAT






TC

GTCACAG






46
PTEN
46F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

46R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTGGTA



TCTTCCGATCTG







TGTATTTAACCATG

TGAAGATATATTC






CAGATCC

CTCCAATTCAGG








AC






47
ATM
47F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

47R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGTTGG



TCTTCCGATCTG







AAGCTGCTTGGG

TTATTTGAAGATA








AAGAACTTCRGT








GG






48
KDR
48F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

48R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGCTGAG



TCTTCCGATCTC







CATTAGCTTGCAA

CTCTTTCTTCCTG






GA

AATGCTGAAA






49
GNAS
49F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

49R

GTGACTGGAGT

20






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTCAGG



TCTTCCGATCTC







ACCTGCTTCGCT

CAGTAAGCCAAC








TGTTACCTTTT






50
PIK3C
50F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

50R

GTGACTGGAGT

3



A


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGCACA



TCTTCCGATCTTC







ATAAAACAGTTAG

TCAAACAGGAG






CCAGA

AAGAAGGATGA






51
RB1
51F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

51R

GTGACTGGAGT

13






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCTGCA



TCTTCCGATCTT







TTGGTGCTAAAAG

GTAATAATTAAAT






TTTCT

TGGCATTCCTTT








GG






52
MPL
52F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

52R

GTGACTGGAGT

1






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCATCTA



TCTTCCGATCTG







GTGCTGGGCCTCA

ACCAGGTGGAG








CCGAAG






53
STK11
53F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

53R

GTGACTGGAGT

19






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGCATA



TCTTCCGATCTGT







GCCAGGGCATTG

AGGCACGTGCTA








GGGG






54
FGFR1
54F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

54R

GTGACTGGAGT

8






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTGTTT



TCTTCCGATCTCT







CTTTCTCCTCTGA

AGTGCAGTTCCA






AGAGG

GATGAACAC






55
TP53
55F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

55R

GTGACTGGAGT

17






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGAAAAT



TCTTCCGATCTG







GTTTCCTGACTCA

TGACCCGGAAG






GAGGG

GCAGTC






56
RB1
56F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

56R

GTGACTGGAGT

13






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTTCCTT



TCTTCCGATCTT







TGTAGTGTCCATA

GTTGAAGAAGTA






AATTCTTT

TGATGTATTGTTT








GC






57
CDH1
57F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

57R

GTGACTGGAGT

16






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCGTCGT



TCTTCCGATCTG







AATCACCACACTG

GGAGGCTGTATA






AAAG

CACCATATTGA






58
FLT3
58F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

58R

GTGACTGGAGT

13






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCACAT



TCTTCCGATCTCT







TGCCCCTGACAAC

TCACCACTTTCC








CGTGG






59
PDGFR
59F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

59R

GTGACTGGAGT

4



A


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCCTGA



TCTTCCGATCTA







GTCATTTCTTCCTT

CTATGTGTCGAA






TTCC

AGGCAGTGTA






60
HNF1A
60F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

60R

GTGACTGGAGT

12






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTATGAGC



TCTTCCGATCTC







TACCAACCAAGAA

AGATCCTGTTCC






GG

AGGCCTAT






61
MET
61F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

61R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTATTTTG



TCTTCCGATCTG







GTCTTGCCAGAGA

CTTTGGAAAGTC






CATG

TGCAAACTCAA






62
MET
62F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

62R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTCCCT



TCTTCCGATCTTC







GCAACAGCTGAAT

TCAATGGGCAAT






C

GAAAATGTA






63
MET
63F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

63R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGCAGTG



TCTTCCGATCTCA







CTAACCAAGTTCT

TGGAGTATACTT






TTCT

TTGTGGTTTGC






64
AKT1
64F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

64R

GTGACTGGAGT

14






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTACRATG



TCTTCCGATCTC







ACTTCCTTCTTGA

CAGGATCACCTT






GGA

GCCGAA






65
GNA11
65F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

65R

GTGACTGGAGT

19






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTGTGT



TCTTCCGATCTC







CCTTTCAGGATGG

CACTGCTTTGAG






TG

AACGTGAC






66
GNAS
66F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

66R

GTGACTGGAGT

20






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCYCCAC



TCTTCCGATCTCT







CAGCATGTTTGA

TTGCTTCTGTGT








TGTTAGGG






67
KIT
67F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

67R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTCTAG



TCTTCCGATCTC







TGCATTCAAGCAC

CAATTTAAGGGG






AATGG

ATGTTTAGGCT






68
PTPN11
68F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

68R

GTGACTGGAGT

12






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCCAATG



TCTTCCGATCTG







GACTATTTTAGAA

GGCAATTAAAAG






GAAATGGA

AGAAGAATGGA






69
ALK
69F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

69R

GTGACTGGAGT

2






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGTCTCT



TCTTCCGATCTG







CGGAGGAAGGAC

CAGAGAGGGAT






TT

GTAACCAAAATT






70
JAK3
70F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

70R

GTGACTGGAGT

19






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGACCT



TCTTCCGATCTC







TAGCAGGATCCAG

CTGTCGGTGAGC






G

ACTGA






71
NRAS
71F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

71R

GTGACTGGAGT

1






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGAAAG



TCTTCCGATCTC







CTGTACCATACCT

CAGTTCGTGGGC






GTCT

TTGTT






72
BRAF
72F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

72R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGTCACA



TCTTCCGATCTTC







ATGTCACCACATT

TACCAAGTGTTT






ACATACT

TCTTGATAAAAA








C






73
ATM
73F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

73R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTATTTGA



TCTTCCGATCTG







CCGTGGAGAAGT

AGAGAGCCAAA






AGAATC

GTACCATAGGTA






74
KRAS
74F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

74R

GTGACTGGAGT

12






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCATGT



TCTTCCGATCTC







ACTGGTCCCTCAT

CAAGAGACAGG






TGC

TTTCTCCATCA






75
MET
75F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

75R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTATGATA



TCTTCCGATCTC







GCCGTCTTTAACA

AGAAATGGTTTC






AGCTC

AAATGAATCTGT






76
EGFR
76F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

76R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCCAGGA



TCTTCCGATCTCA







ACGTACTGGTGAA

TTTTCCTGACAC






AAC

CAGGGAC






77
TP53
77F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

77R

GTGACTGGAGT

17






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGTCCC



TCTTCCGATCTG







AGAATGCAAGAA

GAGCAGCCTCTG






GC

GCATT






78
SMO
78F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

78R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGTTTT



TCTTCCGATCTG







GTGGGCTACAAG

GGCACTTGCTGC






AACT

CAGTA






79
FBXW7
79F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

79R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTAAACTT



TCTTCCGATCTG







ACTTTGCCTGTGA

CACCTATAAGAA






CTGC

AGATGTGCAGA






80
SMO
80F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

80R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGTGGAG



TCTTCCGATCTCT







AAGATCAACCTGT

CACCCTCAGCCT






TTGC

TGGG






81
MET
81F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

81R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGCCTGA



TCTTCCGATCTG







ATGATGACATTCT

TCAACAAAAACA






TTTCG

ATGTGAGATGTC






82
ATM
82F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

82R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTACCAGA



TCTTCCGATCTG







GTTTCAACAAAGT

AGTGGAAGAAG






AGCTG

GCACTGTG






83
FGFR2
83F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

83R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCGGCAY



TCTTCCGATCTA







AGGATGACTGTTA

GAGTTAGCACAC






C

CAGACTG






84
PTEN
84F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

84R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTATTTCCA



TCTTCCGATCTA







TCCTGCAGAAGAA

GGATGGATTCGA






GC

CTTAGACTTGA






85
VHL
85F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

85R

GTGACTGGAGT

3






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGCTCTT



TCTTCCGATCTC







TAACAACCTTTGC

AATATCACACTG






TTGTC

CCAGGTACTG






86
KIT
86F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

86R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCTCTTC



TCTTCCGATCTG







CATTGTAGAGCAA

TTCTCTCTCCAG






ATCC

AGTGCTCTAAT






87
FBXW
87F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

87R

GTGACTGGAGT

4



7


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTATTCAA



TCTTCCGATCTG







ATAACACCCAATG

GTTCACAACTAT






AAGAATGT

CAATGAGTTCAT






88
EGFR
88F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

8SR

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTCATC



TCTTCCGATCTG







ACGCAGCTCATGC

AGATAAGGAGC








CAGGATCCTC






89
SMO
89F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

89R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCCCAGC



TCTTCCGATCTG







ATGTCACCAAGAT

CTTCTGGGACTG






G

GAGTACAG






90
FBXW
90F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

90R

GTGACTGGAGT

4



7


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAAGTCC



TCTTCCGATCTG







CAACCATGACAAG

TGTCCGATCTGT






ATTTT

AGATCCACTAA






91
PTEN
91F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

91R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGCCAG



TCTTCCGATCTTT







CTAAAGGTGAAGA

TGTACTTTACTTT






T

CATTGGGAGA






92
SMAD
92F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

92R

GTGACTGGAGT

18



4


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTCCAT



TCTTCCGATCTCA







CAAGTATGATGGT

TCCAGCATCCAC






GAAGG

CAAGTAAT






93
PIK3C
93F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

93R

GTGACTGGAGT

3



A


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCTTCC



TCTTCCGATCTG







ACACAATTAAACA

AATTGCACAATC






GCATG

CATGAACAGC






94
KIT
94F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

94R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTAGTGT



TCTTCCGATCTG







ATTCACAGAGACT

AAACGTGAGTAC






TGGCA

CCATTCTCTG






95
KIT
95F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

95R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCATGTT



TCTTCCGATCTT







TCCAATTTTAGCG

GTCCAAGCTGCC






AGTGC

TTTTATTGTC






96
ATM
96F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

96R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGTGTA



TCTTCCGATCTG







GGAAAGGTACAAT

TGGATTCCTCTA






GATTTCC

AGTGAAAATCAT








GA






97
SMAD
97F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

97R

GTGACTGGAGT

18



4


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGAAGG



TCTTCCGATCTA







ACTGTTGCAGATA

AAGTAGGCAGC






GCATC

CTTTATAAAAGC








A






98
ALK
98F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

98R

GTGACTGGAGT

2






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGGGTGA



TCTTCCGATCTG







GGCAGTCTTTACT

GGAAGAAAGGA






CA

AATGCATTTCCT






99
EGFR
99F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

99R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGCGAAG



TCTTCCGATCTG







CCACACTGACGT

CTGCCTCCTGGA








CTATGTC






100
8RAF
100F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

100R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTACCAT



TCTTCCGATCTGT







CCACAAAATGGAT

AAGTAAAGGAA






CCAG

AACAGTAGATCT








CA






101
ABL1
10IF

ACACTCTTTCCCT

101R

GTGACTGGAGT

9






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCGAAAC



TCTTCCGATCTG







TGCCTGGTAGGG

GAGCCAAGTTCC








CCATC






102
ERBB4
102F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

102R

GTGACTGGAGT

2






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTACTTAC



TCTTCCGATCTTC







GTGGACATTTCTT

CACTGTCATTGA






GACAC

AATTCATGCA






103
ARC
103F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

103R

GTGACTGGAGT

5






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCAGACT



TCTTCCGATCTC







GCAGGGTTCTAGT

CCACTCATGTTT






TTATC

AGCAGATGTAC






104
FGFR2
104F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

104R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCAGTCC



TCTTCCGATCTG







GGCTTGGAGGAT

GAGTGGGGATG








GGAGAA






105
PTEN
105F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

105R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTACCACA



TCTTCCGATCTT







GCTAGAACTTATC

GTGCATATTTATT






AAACC

ACATCGGGGC






106
RET
106F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

106R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGGCTAT



TCTTCCGATCTC







GGCACCTGCAAC

AGCCCCACAGA








GGTCTC






107
ERBB4
107F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

107R

GTGACTGGAGT

2






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTGCAG



TCTTCCGATCTTT







TCTTACATTTGACC

TTCCTCCAAAGG






ATGA

TCATCAGTTC






108
CTNNB
108F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

108R

GTGACTGGAGT

3



1


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTAGCTG



TCTTCCGATCTGT







ATTTGATGGAGTT

AAAGGCAATCCT






GGAC

GAGGAAGAG






109
HNF1A
109F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

109R

GTGACTGGAGT

12






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTGGGC



TCTTCCGATCTC







TCCAACCTCGTC

ACAAGCTGGCCA








TGGAC






110
PDGFR
110F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

110R

GTGACTGGAGT

4



A


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTGGTA



TCTTCCGATCTG







ATTCACCAGTTAC

CCTTATGACTCA






CTGTC

AGATGGGAGTT






111
STK11
111F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

111R

GTGACTGGAGT

19






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGTGGGT



TCTTCCGATCTG







ATGGACACGTTCA

CAAGGTGAAGG






TC

AGGTGC






112
ATM
112F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

112R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGCTGTT



TCTTCCGATCTA







CCTCAGTTTGTCA

AGGTAATTTGCA






CTAAA

ATTAACTCTTGAT








T






113
KDR
113F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

113R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAACAAC



TCTTCCGATCTG







ACTTGAAAATCTG

GTTTGCACTCCA






AGCAG

ATCTCTATCAG






114
ERBB2
114F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

114R

GTGACTGGAGT

17






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAATTCC



TCTTCCGATCTC







AGTGGCCATCAAA

ACCCTCTCCTGC






GT

TAGGA






115
FBXW
115F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

115R

GTGACTGGAGT

4



7


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTACCYTG



TCTTCCGATCTG







CAATGTTTGTAAA

TGTGAATGCAAT






CACTG

TCCCTGTC






116
SMAD
116F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

116R

GTGACTGGAGT

IS



4


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCTGAT



TCTTCCGATCTA







GTCTTCCAAATCT

AATTCACTTACA






TTTCT

CCGGGCC






117
SMAD
117F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

117R

GTGACTGGAGT

18



4


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTTGAT



TCTTCCGATCTGT







TTGCGTCAGTGTC

AGGTGGAATAG






AT

CTCCAGC






118
EGFR
118F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

118R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTAACG



TCTTCCGATCTT







TCTTCCTTCTCTCT

GAGTTTCTGCTT






CTGT

TGCTGTGTG






119
JAK3
119F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

119R

GTGACTGGAGT

19






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTCACT



TCTTCCGATCTC







GTCTCCAGCCATG

AAATTTTGTGCT








CACAGACCT






120
IDH1
120F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

120R

GTGACTGGAGT

2






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTGCCA



TCTTCCGATCTC







ACATGACTTACTT

CAGAATATTTCGT






GATCC

ATGGTGCCAT






121
ARC
121F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

121R

GTGACTGGAGT

5






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTATGCCT



TCTTCCGATCTTT







CCAGTTCAGGAA

ATTTCTGCCATG






AAT

CCAACA






122
PGFR2
122F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

122R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAAGTCC



TCTTCCGATCTG







TCACCTTGAGAAC

GGCTGGGCATC






C

ACTGTA






123
PTEN
123F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

123R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAGGACC



TCTTCCGATCTA







AGAGGAAACCTC

AATGATCTTGAC






AG

AAAGCAAATAAA








GAC






124
SMAD
124F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

124R

GTGACTGGAGT

18



4


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGTGATC



TCTTCCGATCTG







TATGCCCGTCTCT

AGTTGTATCACC






GG

TGGAATTGGTA






125
ARC
125F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

125R.

GTGACTGGAGT

5






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTACTGAG



TCTTCCGATCTA







AGCACTGATGATA

AATGTAAGCCAG






AACAC

TCTTTGTGTCA






126
TP53
126F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

126R

GTGACTGGAGT

17






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTGTCC



TCTTCCGATCTA







TGCTTGCTTACCT

CTACTCAGGATA






C

GGAAAAGAGAA






127
ERBB4
127F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

127R

GTGACTGGAGT

2






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGTGGA



TCTTCCGATCTCT







TAACACATACCAG

GGACATTTTTCC






GTGA

ACACAGTTTG






128
RB1
128F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

128R

GTGACTGGAGT

13






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGTGATT



TCTTCCGATCTA







TTCTAAAATAGCA

AAATTTCAgccgg






GGCTCTTAT

gcgc






129
ATM
129F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

129R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGCTTA



TCTTCCGATCTC







ATTATTCTGAAGG

AGGTCTTCCAGA






GCCG

TGTGTAATACATT






130
HRAS
130F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

130R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCGGTGC



TCTTCCGATCTTC







GCATGTACTGGT

CAACAGGCACG








TCTCC






131
PTPN1
131F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

131R

GTGACTGGAGT

12



1


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCTTCAT



TCTTCCGATCTAT







GATGTTTCCTTCGT

TGAAACACTACA






AGG

GCGCAGG






132
SMO
132F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

132R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTCCAA



TCTTCCGATCTC







TGAGACTCTGTCC

GGGCAAGACCT






TGC

CCTACTT






133
KIT
133F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

133R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCTCAA



TCTTCCGATCTT







CCATCTGTGAGTC

GGACTTTTGAGA






CA

TCCTGGATGAA






134
ATM
134F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

134R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCAGCTG



TCTTCCGATCTA







TTACCTGTTTGAA

GATCCAATGCTG






AAACATTT

GCCTA






135
EGFR
135F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

135R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCCACTA



TCTTCCGATCTG







CATTGACGGCCC

TGGAAAGTGAA








GGAGAACAGAA








C






136
NOTC
136F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

136R

GTGACTGGAGT

9



H1


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGACCAG



TCTTCCGATCTC







CGAGGATGGCAG

ACTCAGGAAGCT








CCGGC






137
FGFR3
137F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

137R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCAATGT



TCTTCCGATCTG







GCTGGTGACCGA

GGTCATGCCAGT






G

AGGACG






138
FGFR3
138F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

138R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGGGAC



TCTTCCGATCTG







GACTCCGTGTTTG

TGAGGGGTCCCT








AGCAG






139
KDR
139F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

139R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCCCACT



TCTTCCGATCTG







GGATGCTGCACA

TTGACTGAACTT








CCAAAGCAC






140
ABL1
140F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

140R

GTGACTGGAGT

9






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGTCTTG



TCTTCCGATCTTC







TTGGCAGGGGTC

ATCCACAGGTAG








GGGC






141
APC
141F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

141R

GTGACTGGAGT

5






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCATCAG



TCTTCCGATCTA







CTGAAGATGAAAT

GCACCCTAGAAC






AGGATGTAA

CAAATCC






142
TP53
142F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

142R

GTGACTGGAGT

17






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTSCCAGT



TCTTCCGATCTAT







TGCAAACCAGAC

CAGTGAGGAATC








AGAGGC






143
FGFR3
143F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

143R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGTGTCT



TCTTCCGATCTCA







GTCCTGGGAGTCT

TCCCTGTGGAGG








AGCT






144
KIT
144F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

144R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTGTTG



TCTTCCGATCTA







TGCTTCTATTACAG

ATGATCCTTGCC






GCTC

AAAGACAACT






145
KDR
145F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

145R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTGGCT



TCTTCCGATCTC







TTGAATCATTAGC

GGACTCAGAAC






GTTAC

CACATCATAAAT






146
ERB84
146F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

146R

GTGACTGGAGT

2






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAAGGTT



TCTTCCGATCTA







TACACATTTTAATC

CATTCAGCAAAC






CCATTTT

AAGCTCAAAAC






147
ATM
147F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

147R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTATTAGG



TCTTCCGATCTTA







TGGACCACACAG

AGGTGAGCCTTC






GA

CCTTC






148
RET
148F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

148R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTACTCGT



TCTTCCGATCTTA







GCTATTTTTCCTCA

CGTGAAGAGGA






CAG

GCCAG






149
IDH2
149F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

149R

GTGACTGGAGT

15






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGCCTAC



TCTTCCGATCTCA







CTGGTCGCCATG

TTGGGACTTTTC








CACATCTTCT






150
MET
150F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

150R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGACATG



TCTTCCGATCTCT







TCTTTCCCCACAAT

TTCATCTGTAAA






CATA

GGACCGGTTC






151
SMAR
151F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

151R

GTGACTGGAGT

22



CB1


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTACTCA



TCTTCCGATCTC







TAGGTGGGAAACT

CTAACACTAAGG






ACCTC

GTGCGT






152
SRC
152F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

152R

GTGACTGGAGT

20






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTTCCT



TCTTCCGATCTC







GGAGGACTACTTC

TCTGCCTGCCTG






ACG

CTGTT






153
ATM
153F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

153R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTATCTAG



TCTTCCGATCTTC







GATCCAAATTTTA

ATCTTGTACTGG






GAAGTCAAG

AGAAAATTCTTG








TG






154
NOTC
154F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

154R

GTGACTGGAGT

9



H1


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCACTGC



TCTTCCGATCTT







CGGTTGTCAATCT

GACGCCACAGTC






C

AGGAC






155
KIT
155F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

155R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCACCT



TCTTCCGATCTA







TCTTTCTAACCTT

AACGTGATTCAT






TTCTTATGT

TTATTTGTTCAA








AGC






156
KDR
156F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

156R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGATGCT



TCTTCCGATCTA







CACTGTGTGTTGC

ATAATTGGGGTC






T

CCTCCCT






157
RET
157F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

157R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCGCAGC



TCTTCCGATCTT







CTGTACCCAGTG

GCTACCACAAGT








TTGCCC






158
PTEN
158F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

158R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGCFACG



TCTTCCGATCTA







ACCCAGTTACCAT

GCTACCTGTTAA






AGC

AGAATCATCTGG








A






159
GNAQ
159F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

159R

GTGACTGGAGT

9






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGAGGTG



TCTTCCGATCTA







ACATTTTCAAAGC

AATATAGCACTA






AGTG

CTTACAAACTTA








GGG






160
ERB84
160F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

160R

GTGACTGGAGT

2






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAAAGTG



TCTTCCGATCTG







GCTAAAGTTGATC

TCCTGAGCAGC






TGATTGT

MTCCAG






161
JAK2
161F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

161R

GTGACTGGAGT

9






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCCTTAG



TCTTCCGATCTC







TCTTTCTTTGAAG

CTTTCTCAGAGC






CAGCA

ATCTGTTTTTG






162
ERBB4
162F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

162R

GTGACTGGAGT

2






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTATAACT



TCTTCCGATCTT







CATTCATCGCCAC

GAATGGTGTCTG






ATAGG

CATAACAAAGG






163
EGFR
163F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

163R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGTCTCT



TCTTCCGATCTT







GTGTTCTTGTCCC

GTATAAGGTAAG






C

GTCCCTGG






164
CSF1R
164F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

164R

GTGACTGGAGT

5






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCATCCAT



TCTTCCGATCTTC







GGAGGAGTTGAA

AGGTGCTCACTA






GTTT

GAGCTC






165
VHL
165F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

165R

GTGACTGGAGT

3






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTCTTG



TCTTCCGATCTA







TTCGTTCCTTGTAC

GGAGACTGGAC






TGAG

ATCGTCAG






166
PDGFR
166F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

166R

GTGACTGGAGT

4



A


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAGGCVC



TCTTCCGATCTC







CATTTACATCATCA

ACCCAGAGAAG








CCAAAGAAAG






167
ATM
167F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

167R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTATAGGA



TCTTCCGATCTC







AGTAGAGGAAAG

CAGGTACAGTAA






TATTCTTCAG

GTAGGTCATGT






168
SMAR
168F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

168R

GTGACTGGAGT

22



CB1


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCACCCC



TCTTCCGATCTCT







TACACTTGGCTG

GGTAACCAGCCC








ATCAG






169
STK11
169F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

169R

GTGACTGGAGT

19






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTCCCC



TCTTCCGATCTG







TCGAAATGAAGCT

GGAGCCTCATCC






A

CTCTG






170
HRAS
170F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

170R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCCAGGC



TCTTCCGATCTC







TCAC.CTCTATAGTG

ACCACCAGCTTA






G

TATTCCGT






171
ERB82
171F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

171R

GTGACTGGAGT

17






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCCTCTC



TCTTCCGATCTG







AGCGTACCCTTGT

GTGCAGCTGGT








GACACA






172
EZH2
172F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

172R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTATACAAT



TCTTCCGATCTG







GCCACCTGAATAC

TGCCAGCAATAG






AGG

ATGCTAGA






173
FBXW
173F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

173R

GTGACTGGAGT

4



7


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTCCTG



TCTTCCGATCTT







CCATCATATTGAAC

GCAGAGGGAGA






ACAG

AACAGAAAAAC






174
KIT
174F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

174R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGTAGAG



TCTTCCGATCTAT







CATGACCCATGAG

GGACATGAAACC






TG

TGGAGTT






175
RB1
175F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

175R

GTGACTGGAGT

13






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGTTCTT



TCTTCCGATCTC







CCTCAGACATTCA

CAGGGTAGGTC






AACGT

AAAAGTATCCTT






176
EGFR
176F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

176R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTACCAG



TCTTCCGATCTG







ATGGATGTGAACC

GAGTATCCCATC






CC

TTGGAGAGTC






177
ERBB4
177F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

177R

GTGACTGGAGT

2






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTGCCA



TCTTCCGATCTTT







TTTTGGATATATTC

GTCCCACGAATA






CTTACCT

ATGCGTAAAT






178
CDH1
178F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

178R

GTGACTGGAGT

16






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC







CCGATCFACTTGG


TCTTCCGATCTTC







TTGTGTCGATCTCT

TTCAATCCCACC






CT

ACGGTAAT






179
STK11
179F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

179R

GTGACTGGAGT

19






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAGACAC



TCTTCCGATCTA







CAAGGACCGGTG

CATCGAGGATGA








CATCATCTACA






180
ABL1
180F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

180R

GTGACTGGAGT

9






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCAAGT



TCTTCCGATCTT







ACTTACCCACTGA

GCAGCTCCTTGG






AAAGC

TGAGTAA






181
PTEN
181F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

181R

GTGACTGGAGT

10






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAGCTCA



TCTTCCGATCTT







TTTTTGTTAATGGT

GCTTGCAAATAT






GGCT

CTTCTAAAACAA








CTA






182
ATM
182F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

182R

GTGACTGGAGT

11






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTGATAA



TCTTCCGATCTCA







ATKAGCAGTCAGC

TGGAATGTTGTT






AGAA

TGCCTACC






183
RB1
183F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

183R

GTGACTGGAGT

13






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTTCTTA



TCTTCCGATCTC







TTCCCACAGTGTA

CTGCAGAATGAG






TCGG

TATGAACTCAT






184
KDR
184F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

184R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAGCFTT



TCTTCCGATCTC







AAAAGTTCTGCFT

ACCATTCCACTG






CCTCA

CAGAAGAAAT






185
EGFR
185F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

185R

GTGACTGGAGT

7






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTCCTC



TCTTCCGATCTA







AAAAGAGAAATC

AATATGTACTACG






ACGCAT

AAAATTCCTATG








CC






186
NOTC
186F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

186R

GTGACTGGAGT

9



H1


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAAGATC



TCTTCCGATCTC







ATCTGCTGGCCGT

CAGCCTCTCGGG








TACAT






187
TP53
187F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

187R

GTGACTGGAGT

17






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAGAGG



TCTTCCGATCTA







CAAGCAGAGGCT

CCTAGGAGATAA






G

CACAGGCC






188
APC
188F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

188R

GTGACTGGAGT

5






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTAGAGAA



TCTTCCGATCTA







CGCGGAATTGGTC

GCCATTCATACC






T

TCTCAGGAA






189
SMAD4
189F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

189R

GTGACTGGAGT

18






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCTTTTTY



TCTTCCGATCTC







CTTCCTAAGGTTG

GTGCACCTGGA






CACA

GATGCT






190
SMAR
190F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

190R

GTGACTGGAGT

22



CB1


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTCTTGTA



TCTTCCGATCTA







TCTCCTCAGGGAA

GACAAGAAGAG






CAG

AACCTTCCCC






191
ERB82
191F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

191R

GTGACTGGAGT

17






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTACATG



TCTTCCGATCTG







GGTGCTTCCCATT

GGGCAAGGTTA






C

GGTGAAG






192
NRAS
192F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

192R

GTGACTGGAGT

1






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTACAAA



TCTTCCGATCTG







GTGGTTCTGGATT

CGAGCCACATCT






AGCTG

ACAGTACTTTA






193
FGFR3
193F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

193R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTCATGTC



TCTTCCGATCTC







TTTGCAGCCGAG

CAAGAAAGGCC






G

TGGGCT






194
KIT
194F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

194R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTGGTGAT



TCTTCCGATCTA







CTATTTTTCCCTTT

GAAACAGGCTG






CTCCC

AGTTTTGGTC






195
KDR
195F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

195R

GTGACTGGAGT

4






ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTAGACA



TCTTCCGATCTT







AGGTCTTCCTTCC

CCTCCTCCATAC






ACTT

AGGAAACAG






196
PIK3C
196F

ACACTCTTTCCCT

195R

GTGACTGGAGT

3



A


ACACGACGCTCTT



TCAGACGTGTGC








CCGATCTTTCTCA



TCTTCCGATCTT







ATGATGCTTGGCT

GGCTGGACAAC






C

AAAAATGGA










Amplification of the target nucleic acid regions. A pool of 196 amplicon primer pairs in a concentration of 50 nM for each primer were added to a single PCR tube, 50 ng of human genomic DNA (GenBank No.: NA12878) and 10 of amplification reaction mixture which contains 3% glycerol, 0.2 nM dNTPs, 50nM pyrophosphate and 2 units of KlenTaq-S DNA polymerase to a final volume of 20 μL with DNase/RNase free water. The PCR tube was put on a thermal cycler and run the following temperature profile to get the amplified amplicon library. An initial holding stage was carried out at 98° C. for 2 minutes, followed by 98° C. 15 seconds, 55° C. 8 minutes, for 17 cycles. After cycling, the reaction was held at 72° C. for 5 minutes and then 4° C. until proceeding to the beads purification step to remove excess primers. The tube cap was carefully removed and 24 μL of Agencourt AMPure® XP Reagent (Beckman Coulter, CA) was added to the reaction mixture to purify the DNA. The reaction mixture was vortex mixed and incubated for 5 minutes at room temperature. The tube was placed in a magnetic rack and incubated until solution clears. The supernatant was carefully remove and discarded without disturbing the pellet, then 150 μL of freshly prepared 70% ethanol was added. The reaction mixture was vortexed to mix well, pulsed spin, and incubated until solution clears. The supernatant was carefully removed and discarded without disturbing the pellet. Another potion of 150 μL of freshly prepared 70% ethanol was added. The reaction mixture was vortexed to mix well, pulsed spin, and incubated until solution clears. The supernatant was carefully removed and discarded without disturbing the pellet. Leave the tube open to evaporate for about 2 minutes. The remaining bead pellet in the tube contains the purified DNA.


Construction of library. Then 50 μL of Platinum® PCR SuperMix High Fidelity DNA Polymerase (Thermo Fisher, Cat #12532016) and 2 μL of Library Amplification Barcoded Primer Mix (10 μM concentration for each primer was added to bead pellet). The sequence of each primer is shown in Table 4. The PCR tube was put on a thermal cycler and run the following temperature profile to get the amplified amplicon library. An initial holding stage was carried out at 98° C. for 2 minutes, followed by 98° C. 15 seconds, 60° C. 1 minute, for 5 cycles. After cycling, the reaction was held at 72° C. for 5 minutes and then kept at 4° C. until purification. The tube cap was carefully removed and 44 μL of Agencourt AMPure® XP Reagent (Beckman Coulter, CA) was added to the reaction mix for purifying the product. The reaction was vortex mixed and incubated for 5 minutes at room temperature. The tube was placed in a magnetic rack and incubated until solution clears. The supernatant was carefully removed and discarded without disturbing the pellet. Then 150 μL of freshly prepared 70% ethanol was added to the pellet; the reaction mixture was vortexed to mix well, pulsed spin, and incubated until solution clears; the supernatant was carefully removed and discarded without disturbing the pellet; the foregoing wash step was repeated for another time. After the wash, leave the tube open to evaporate for about 2 minutes. Then 50 μL of low TE buffer was added and the solution was vortexed thoroughly. The tube was placed in the magnet until solution clears. The supernatant containing library was collected to a separate clean tube. The library was quantified using Qubit® 2.0 Fluorometer (Life Technologies, CA) and Bioanalyzer (Agilent Technologies, CA) according to manufacturer protocol.









TABLE 4







Primers for construction of library








Primer Name
Primer Sequence





R2TruSeqBC001
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATcgcgac



tgaaGTGACTGGAGTTCAGACGTGT





R2TruSeqBC002
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATagcatc



gataGTGACTGGAGTTCAGACGTGT





R2TruSeqBC003
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATcgacac



atggGTGACTGGAGTTCAGACGTGT





R2TruSeqBC004
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATcgacta



cgcaGTGACTGGAGTTCAGACGTGT





R2TruSeqBC005
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATcactgc



tgagGTGACTGGAGTTCAGACGTGT





R2TruSeqBC006
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATtcgctg



tacaGTGACTGGAGTTCAGACGTGT





R2TruSeqBC007
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATcgctgc



agtaGTGACTGGAGTTCAGACGTGT





R2TruSeqBC008
CAAGCAGAAGACGGCATACGAGATagactt



gcagGTGACTGGAGTTCAGACGTGT





R1_TruSeq_primer
AATGATACGGCGACCACCGAGATCTACACT



CTTTCCCTACACGAC









The library was sequenced on Illumina MiSeq sequencer according to manufacturer's procedure.


Data Processing


Sequencing reads were aligned to GRC37/hg19 reference genome downloaded from web of ucsc genome browser (http://hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu/goldenPath/hg19/bigZips/) using the software of bowtie2 (downloaded from https://sourceforge.net/projects/bowtie-bio/files/bowtie/1.2.1.1) with default settings. The aligned reads were further assigned to amplicons based on the match between positions of reads of R1 and R2 in genome and positions of forward and reverse primers of designed assays. The preliminary results indicated that performances of cancer hot spot panel were (1) 69.7% reads aligned to genome; (2) 95.5% reads aligned to target regions of design; (3) 98.1% of assays with amplicon read coverage within 5-fold of the mean average.


Example 2. Multiplex Enrichment of Mutant Nucleic Acid for Sequencing

In 20 μL PCR reaction solution, two pools of 8 primer pairs (see Table 5) with each primer containing dideoxynucleotide at its 3′ end in 0.5 μM concentration were added together with 2 μL of 10X PCR buffer, 3 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM dNTP, 50 nM pyrophosphate, 2 units of AmpliTaq DNA polymerase and 1%, 0.1% or 0.01% mutant nucleic acid (Horizon discovery, Cambridge, United Kingdomnin), 30 ng of human genomic DNA (GenBank No.: NA12878). The PCR tube was loaded on a thermal cycler and run the following temperature profile: 95° C. for 2 min; 95° C. 15 seconds, 65° C. 120 seconds, for 40 cycles; hold at 4° C. 5 μL ExoSAP-IT™ solution (Affymetrix, CA) was added to the tube, and the reaction was incubated at 37° C. for 15 min, 80° C. for 10 min, held at 4° C. 2 μL of reaction solution was used to perform cycle sequencing with BigDye™ Terminator v3.1 cycle sequencing kit (Life Technologies, CA) and the resulting DNA was purified according to manufacturer protocol. The purified sample electrophoresis was carried out on ABI Prism 3730 DNA analyzer according to manufacturer recommended protocol. Electropherogram in FIG. 12 showed examples of enrichment of mutant nucleic acid (EGFR COSMIC6240 mutation, EGFR COSMIC6252mutation, COSMIC6241 mutation, COSMIC6224 mutation, COSMIC6223 mutation and COSMIC6213 mutation from FIG. 12 from 1%, 0.1% or 0.01% (Mol/Mol) of mutant in wildtype background after amplification reaction.









TABLE 5







Primers for enrichment of mutant nucleic acid











Pool
Forward
Forward
Reverse
Reverse


ID
Primer ID
Primer Sequence
Primer ID
Primer Sequence





PMS
SMDM13
CAGGAAACAGCTATGAC
SMDM13M
TGTAAAACGACGGCC


001
CF0033
CGTGGAGAAGCTCCCAA
R0033
AGTCGAACGCACCGG




CCAAGC

AGCT



SMDM13
TGTAAAACGACGGCCAG
SMDM13C
CAGGAAACAGCTATG



MF0055
TGAAAGTTAAAATTCCC
R0055
ACCGGCCTGAGGTTC




GTCGCTATCAAA

AGAGCCATG



SMDM13
CAGGAAACAGCTATGAC
SMDM13M
TGTAAAACGACGGCC



CF0014
CGAAGCCACACTGACGT
R0014
AGTGGCACGTGGGGG




GCCTCT

TTGTCCACGA



SMDM13
CAGGAAACAGCTATGAC
SMDM13M
TGTAAAACGACGGCC



CF0041
CCAGCCAGGAACGTACT
R0041
AGTGCACCCAGCAGT




GGTGAA

TTGGCCC





PMS
SMDM13
CAGGAAACAGCTATGAC
SMDM13M
TGTAAAACGACGGCC


002
CF0002
CGTGGAGAAGCTCCCAA
R0002
AGTTGCCGAACGCAC




CCAAGC

CGGAGCA



SMDM13
TGTAAAACGACGGCCAG
SMDM13C
CAGGAAACAGCTATG



MF0010
TGAAAGTTAAAATTCCC
R0010
ACCGGCCTGAGGTTC




GTCGCTATCAAGA

AGAGCCATG



SMDM13
TGTAAAACGACGGCCAG
SMDM13C
CAGGAAACAGCTATG



MF0044
TCACCGTGCAGCTCATC
R0044
ACCGTTGAGCAGGTA




AT

CTGGGAGCCA



SMDM13
CAGGAAACAGCTATGAC
SMDM13M
TGTAAAACGACGGCC



CF0009
CCAGCCAGGIUCGTACT
R0009
AGTCTTTCTCTTCCGC




GGTGAA

ACCCAGCT









Example 3. Enrichment of Mutant Nucleic Acid by Mismatched PAP Primers for Sequencing

In 20 μL PCR reaction solution, a pair of primers (one primer is SMDCR0166 and the other primer is selected from one of SMDMF0166, SMDMF0166G3, SMDMF0166G6, SMDMF0166C9, SMDMF0166C12, SMDMF0166G15) (see Table 6) with each primer containing dideoxynucleotide at its 3′ end in 0.5 μM concentration were added with 2 μL of 10X PCR buffer, with final concentration of 3 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM dNTP, 90 μM of pyrophosphate and nits of KlenTaq-S. 30 ng of 100% wild type human genomic DNA (see Table 6) or wild type human genomic DNA spiked with 0.1% mutant genomic DNA (EGFR T790M, see Table 6) was also added to the PCR reaction mixture. The PCR tube was loaded on a thermal cycler and run the following temperature profile: 95° C. for 2 min; 95° C. 15 seconds, 65° C. 120 seconds, for 40 cycles; held at 4° C. 5 μL ExoSAP-IT™ solution (Affymetrix, CA) was added to the tube, and the reaction was incubated at 37° C. for 15 min, 80° C. for 10 min, held at 4° C. 2 μL of treated reaction solution was used to perform cycle sequencing reaction with BigDye™ Terminator v3.1 cycle sequencing kit (Life Technologies, CA) and purified according to manufacturer protocol. The purified sample electrophoresis was carried out on ABI Prism 3730 DNA analyzer according to manufacturer recommended protocol. The results are shown in FIG. 13. It can be seen that the mismatched nucleotide contributes to decreasing false positive results.









TABLE 6







Primer and template sequence for


EGFR T790M detection








Primer or



Template
Sequence





SMDMF0166
CTCCACCGTGCAGCTCATCAddT





SMDMF0166G3
CTCCACCGTGCAGGTCATGAddT





SMDMF0166G6
CTCCACCGTGCAGCTGATCAddT





SMDMF0166C9
CTCCACCGTGCACCTCATCAddT





SMDMF0166C12
CTCCACCGTCCAGCTCATCAddT





SMDMF0166G15
CFCCACGGTGCAGCTCATCAddT





SMDCR0166
GTTGAGCAGGTACTGGGAGCCddA





WT Template
GAGGTGGCACGTCGAGTAGTGCGTCGAGTACG


(3′ to 5′)
GGAAGCCGACGGAGGACCTGATACAGGC---





Mut Template
GAGGTGGCACGTCGAGTAGTACGTCGAGTACG


(3′ to 5′)
GGAAGCCGACGGAGGACCTGATACAGGC---









Example 4. Enrichment of Mutant Nucleic Acid by PAP Primers and Proof-Reading PFU Enzyme for Sequencing

In 20 μL PCR reaction solution, forward and reverse primer pairs (see Table 7) with each primer containing dideoxynucleotide at its 3′ end in 0.5 μM concentration were added with 2 μL of 10X PCR buffer, with final concentration of 3 mM MgCl2, 0.2 mM dNTP, 90 μM of pyrophosphate and 2 units of KlenTaq-S with or without 2 units of Pfu DNA polymerase (Promega, Wis.) were added to the reaction mixture. Then 30 ng of 100% wild type human genomic DNA (NA12878) (see Table 7) or wild type human genomic DNA (NA12878) spiked with 0.1% mutant genomic DNA (EGFR G719S, see Table 7) was also added to the PCR reaction mixture. The PCR tube was loaded on a thermal cycler and run the following temperature profile: 95° C. for 2 min; 95° C. 15 seconds, 65° C. 120 seconds, for 40 cycles; held at 4° C. 5 μL ExoSAP-IT™ solution (Affymetrix, CA) was added to the tube, and the reaction was incubated at 37° C. for 15 min, 80° C. for 10 min, held at 4° C. 2 μL of treated reaction solution was used to perform cycle sequencing with BigDye™ Terminator v3.1 cycle sequencing kit (Life Technologies, CA) and purified according to manufacturer protocol. The purified sample electrophoresis was carded out on ABI Prism 3730 DNA analyzer according to manufacturer recommended protocol. The results are shown in FIG. 14. It can be seen that the proof-reading PELT enzyme contributes to decreasing false positive results.









TABLE 7







Primer and template sequence for


EGFR G719S detection








Primer or



Template
Sequence





SMDMF0166
CTCCACCGTGCAGCTCATCAddT





SMDMF0166G3
CTCCACCGTGCAGCTCATGAddT





SMDMF0166G6
CTCCACCGTGCAGCTGATCAddT





SMDMF0166C9
CTCCACCGTGCACCTCATCAddT





SMDMF0166C12
CTCCACCGTCCAGCTCATCAddT





SMDMF0166G15
CTCCACGGTGCAGCTCATCAddT





SMDCR0166
GTTGAGCAGGTACTGGGAGCCddA





WT Template
GAGGTGGCACGTCGAGTAGTGCGTCGAGTACG


(3′ to 5′)
GGAAGCCGACGGAGGACCTGATACAGGC---





Mut Template
GAGGTGGCACGTCGAGTAGTACGTCGAGTACG


(3′ to 5′)
GGAAGCCGACGGAGGACCTGATACAGGC---








Claims
  • 1. A method of amplifying a target nucleic acid, wherein the method comprises: (a) providing a reaction mixture comprising: (i) a nucleic acid sample comprising or suspected of comprising the target nucleic acid, (ii) at least 20 different types of primer pairs, wherein at least one primer of each type of primer pairs is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid, and each primer pair has at least one blocking primer comprising a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension, (iii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iv) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polymerase using the blocking primers; and(b) incubating the reaction mixture under a condition for amplification of the target nucleic acid.
  • 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the blocking group is at or near 3′ terminal of each blocking primer.
  • 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the blocking group is 2′, 3′-dideoxynucleotide, ribonucleotide residue, 2′, 3′ SH nucleotide, or 2′-O—PO3 nucleotide.
  • 4. The method of claim 1, wherein the blocking primer is further modified to decrease the amplification of undesired nucleic acid.
  • 5. The method of claim 4, wherein the modification is introduction of at least one mismatched nucleotide in the primer.
  • 6. (canceled)
  • 7. The method of claim 5, wherein the mismatched nucleotide is 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 or 17 bp away from the nucleotide with the blocking group.
  • 8. The method of claim 5, wherein the mismatched nucleotide base is located on the 5′ side of the nucleotide with the blocking group.
  • 9. (canceled)
  • 10. The method of claim 4, wherein the modification is a modification to form an extra bridge connecting the 2′ oxygen and 4′ carbon of at least one nucleotide of the blocking primer.
  • 11-12. (canceled)
  • 13. The method of claim 1, wherein the reaction mixture comprises at least 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, 120, 140, 160, 180, 200, 250, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 800, 900 or 1000 different types of primer pairs.
  • 14. (canceled)
  • 15. The method of claim 1, wherein the different types of primers pairs can complementarily bind to different target nucleic acids or different sequences in the same target nucleic acid.
  • 16-17. (canceled)
  • 18. The method of claim 1, wherein the target nucleic acid is double strand DNA ligated with single or double adaptor tags or single stranded DNA ligated with single adaptor tag.
  • 19. (canceled)
  • 20. The method of claim 1, wherein the target nucleic acid is double stranded DNA comprising single or double molecular index tag or single stranded DNA comprising single molecular index tag.
  • 21. The method of claim 20, wherein the molecular index tag comprises unique identifier nucleic acid sequence and an adaptor tag.
  • 22. (canceled)
  • 23. The method of claim 1, wherein the primers have common tailing sequence at or near 5′ terminal of the primers.
  • 24. The method of claim 23, wherein the common tailing sequence can be used as molecular index tag, sample index tag or adaptor tag or combinations of three tags.
  • 25-31. (canceled)
  • 32. The method of claim 1, wherein the nucleic acid other than the target nucleic acid is not amplified in step (b) substantially.
  • 33. (canceled)
  • 34. The method of claim 1, wherein the method is used for selective enrichment of mutant nucleic acid in a sample comprising wildtype nucleic acid.
  • 35. The method of claim 34, wherein at least one blocking primer is complementary to the mutant nucleic acid at the mutant residues and the nucleotide of the blocking primer corresponding to a mutant residue has the blocking group.
  • 36-39. (canceled)
  • 40. A method of sequencing a target nucleic acid, wherein the method comprises: (a) providing a reaction mixture comprising: (i) a nucleic acid sample comprising or suspected of comprising the target nucleic acid, (ii) at least 20 different types of primer pairs, wherein at least one primer of each type of primer pairs is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid, and each primer pair has at least one blocking primer comprising a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension, (iii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iv) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polymerase using the blocking primers;(b) incubating the reaction mixture under a condition for amplification of the target nucleic acid;(c) adding adaptor tag, molecular index tag and/or sample index tag to the reaction products obtained from step (b); and(d) determining the sequence of the reaction products obtained from step (c).
  • 41-46. (canceled)
  • 47. A method of amplifying a target nucleic acid, wherein the method comprises: (a) providing a reaction mixture comprising: (i) a nucleic acid sample comprising or suspected of comprising the target nucleic acid, (ii) at least one type of primers that is complementary to a portion of the target nucleic acid, and each type of primers have at least one blocking primer comprising a blocking group capable of blocking polymerase extension, wherein the blocking primer is modified to decrease the amplification of undesired nucleic acid, (iii) nucleic acid polymerase, and (iv) de-blocking agent capable of enabling polymerization of the target nucleic acid by said nucleic acid polymerase using the blocking primer; and(b) incubating the reaction mixture under a condition for amplification of the target nucleic acid.
  • 48-57. (canceled)
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
PCT/CN2017/103393 Sep 2017 CN national
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/CN2018/106436 9/19/2018 WO 00