Catalytic nucleic acid-based diagnostic methods

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6361941
  • Patent Number
    6,361,941
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, March 16, 1999
    25 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, March 26, 2002
    22 years ago
Abstract
This invention provides methods and kits useful for determining whether a subject is afflicted with a disorder characterized by the presence of one or more known nucleic acid mutations. The instant methods comprise steps of nucleic acid molecule isolation, amplification, contact with one or more catalytic nucleic acid molecules specifically cleaving a target sequence present either in the case of disorder or wild-type, but not both, and determining cleavage of the amplified segment(s).
Description




Throughout this application, various publications are cited. The disclosure of these publications is hereby incorporated by reference into this application to describe more fully the state of the art to which this invention pertains.




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




This invention relates to methods of diagnosing disorders characterized by known nucleic acid mutations. The instant methods employ the use of catalytic nucleic acid molecules, and are useful in connection with diagnosing such disorders as cancer and AIDS.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




A variety of inherited and acquired diseases are associated with genetic variations such as point mutations, deletions and insertions. Some of these variations are directly associated with the presence of disease, while others correlate with disease risk and/or prognosis. There are more than 500 human genetic diseases which result from mutations in single genes (21, 22). These include cystic fibrosis, muscular dystrophy, α1-antitrypsin deficiency, phenylketonuria, sickle cell anemia or trait, and various other hemoglobinopathies (21, 22). Furthermore, individuals with increased susceptibility to several common polygenic conditions, such as atherosclerotic heart disease, have been shown to have an association with the inheritance of particular DNA sequence polymorphisms.




Cancer is thought to develop due to the accumulation of genetic lesions in genes involved in cellular proliferation or differentiation. The ras proto-oncogenes, K-ras, N-ras and H-ras, and the p53 tumor suppressor gene are examples of genes which are frequently mutated in human cancers. Specific mutations in these genes leads to an increase in transforming potential. Genetic analysis would be invaluable in the clinic for assessing disease risk, diagnosis of disease, predicting a patient's prognosis or response to therapy, and monitoring a patient's progress. The introduction of such genetic tests, however, will depend on the development of simple, inexpensive, and rapid assays for genetic variations.




Methods of in vitro nucleic acid amplification have wide-spread applications in genetics and disease diagnosis. In the last decade many techniques for amplification of nucleic acid have been described. These include the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (1-7), the ligase chain reaction (LCR) (8), the strand displacement amplification assay (SDA) (9) and transcription-mediated amplification (TMA) (10, 11) (also known as self-sustained sequence replication (SSR)). The amplification products (amplicons) produced by PCR, LCR and SDA are DNA, whereas RNA amplicons are produced by TMA. DNA or RNA templates, generated by these protocols or others, can be analyzed for the presence of sequence variation (i.e. mutation) associated with the disease to be ascertained.




As with nucleic acid amplification, catalytic nucleic acids have been studied intensively in recent years. The potential for suppression of gene function using catalytic nucleic acids as therapeutic agents is widely discussed in the literature (12-18). Catalytic RNA molecules (ribozymes) have been shown to be capable of cleaving both RNA (12) and DNA (17) molecules. Similarly, catalytic DNA molecules (DNAzymes) have also been shown to be capable of cleaving both RNA (13, 19) and DNA (18) molecules. Catalytic nucleic acid can only cleave a target nucleic acid sequence, provided that target sequence meets minimum sequence requirements. The target sequence must be complementary to the hybridizing regions of the catalytic nucleic acid and the target must contain a specific sequence at the site of cleavage. Examples of such sequence requirements at the cleavage site include the requirement for a purine:pyrmidine sequence for a class of DNAzyme cleavage (10-23 model) (19), and the requirement for the sequence uridine:H where H can equal A, C or U but not G, for the hammerhead ribozymes (23).




In addition to their therapeutic potential, catalytic nucleic acid molecules can also distinguish between targets which differ by a single point mutation (14-16). This is achieved by targeting a specific sequence which is present in wild-type but not mutant templates or vice versa. So far, this capacity for discrimination has only been exploited as a method for therapeutic manipulation of gene expression.




A review by Nollau-Wagener (24) compared several methodologies for the detection of point mutations with respect to the type of nucleic acid analyzed, the percentage of mutations detected, the time and cost of performing the assay, and problems relating to the use of toxic reagents. Each of the methodologies examined had its drawbacks. For example, denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis is time consuming, RNAase A cleavage can only detect about 70% of possible mutations, and chemical cleavage involves the use of toxic substances.




Another method, known as restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), involves ascertaining whether a restriction enzyme site is present or absent at the locus of interest. In rare instances, mutations can be detected because they happen to lie within a naturally occurring restriction endonuclease recognition/cleavage site (31).




The inclusion of mismatched bases within primers used to facilitate in vitro amplification can result in the induction of artificial restriction endonuclease recognition/cleavage sites, and hence an increase in the number of loci which can be analyzed by RFLP (32). Modified primers containing mismatched bases have been used to induce artificial recognition/cleavage sites for restriction endonucleases at critical codons within the ras gene family (33-35). The general rules for designing primers which contain mismatched bases located near the 3′ termini of primers have been established (36).




Although the use of mismatched primers has expanded the utility of RFLP analysis, the technique is still limited by the fact that a minimum of four base pairs is required for recognition and cleavage by a restriction enzyme.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




This invention provides a method of determining whether a subject is afflicted with a disorder characterized by the presence of a known nucleic acid mutation, which comprises the steps of (a) isolating a sample of nucleic acid molecules from the subject; (b)(i) amplifying the nucleic acid segment present in the isolated sample, which segment is known to contain the mutation in a subject afflicted with the disorder, and (ii) under suitable conditions, contacting the resulting amplified segment with a catalytic nucleic acid molecule which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (1) in the nucleic acid segment having the known mutation or (2) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, with the proviso that step (ii) can be performed either subsequent to or concurrently with step (i); and (c) determining whether the catalytic nucleic acid molecule in step (b)(ii) cleaves the amplified segment, so as to determine whether the subject is afflicted with the disorder.




This invention also provides a method of determining whether a subject is afflicted with a disorder characterized by the presence of a plurality of known nucleic acid mutations, which comprises the steps of (a) isolating a sample of nucleic acid molecules from the subject; (b)(i) amplifying the nucleic acid segment present in the isolated sample, which segment is known to contain the plurality of mutations in a subject afflicted with the disorder, and (ii) under suitable conditions, contacting the resulting amplified segment with a plurality of catalytic nucleic acid molecules, each of which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (1) in the nucleic acid segment having the known mutation or (2) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, with the proviso that step (ii) can be performed either subsequent to or concurrently with step (i); and (c) determining whether each of the catalytic nucleic acid molecules in step (b)(ii) cleaves the amplified segment, so as to determine whether the subject is afflicted with the disorder.




This invention further provides a method of determining whether a subject is afflicted with a disorder characterized by the presence of a plurality of known nucleic acid mutations, which comprises the steps of (a) isolating a sample of nucleic acid molecules from the subject; (b) (i) amplifying the nucleic acid segments present in the isolated sample, which segments collectively are known to contain the plurality of mutations in a subject afflicted with the disorder, and (ii) under suitable conditions, contacting the resulting amplified segments with a plurality of catalytic nucleic acid molecules, each of which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (1) in one of the nucleic acid segments having one of the known mutations or (2) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, with the proviso that step (ii) can be performed either subsequent to or concurrently with step (i); and (c) determining whether each of the catalytic nucleic acid molecules in step (b)(ii) cleaves the amplified segment containing its respective target sequence, so as to determine whether the subject is afflicted with the disorder.




Finally, this invention provides kits for use in practicing the instant diagnostic methods. The first instant kit comprises (a) a catalytic nucleic acid molecule which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (i) in a nucleic acid segment having a mutation known to be characteristic of a disorder or (ii) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, and (b) a nucleic acid reagent suitable for use in amplifying the nucleic acid segment containing the target sequence.




The second instant kit comprises (a) a 10-23 DNAzyme which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (i) in a nucleic acid segment having a mutation known to be characteristic of a disorder or (ii) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, and (b) a DNA primer suitable for initiating amplification of the segment under polymerase chain reaction conditions, which primer contains at least one purine ribonucleotide residue which serves as the 5′ side of the site within the amplified segment recognized and cleaved by the 10-23 DNAzyme.




The third instant kit comprises (a) a first DNA primer which comprises a zymogene encoding a 10-23 DNAzyme that specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (i) in a nucleic acid segment having a mutation known to be characteristic of a disorder or (ii) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, which first primer is suitable for initiating amplification of the segment under polymerase chain reaction conditions; and (b) a second DNA primer suitable for initiating amplification of the segment under polymerase chain reaction conditions, which second primer contains at least one purine ribonucleotide residue which serves as the 5′ side of the site within the amplified segment recognized and cleaved by the 10-23 DNAzyme, such that, upon amplification, (i) the resulting amplified nucleic acid molecule comprises the 10-23 DNAzyme, and (ii) the amplified nucleic acid segment is recognized and cleaved in cis by the DNAzyme.




DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




This invention provides methods employing catalytic nucleic acids to determine whether a subject is afflicted with a disorder characterized by the presence of one or more known nucleic acid mutations. These methods are collectively applicable to scenarios where the disorder is characterized by (i) a single mutation within a single nucleic acid segment, or (ii) a plurality of mutations within a single nucleic acid segment, or (iii) a plurality of mutations within a plurality of nucleic acid segments. For each mutation tested for by nucleic acid amplification, specific cleavage, and analysis, the instant methods provide a “yes or no” answer as to whether the mutation exists. This answer in turn ultimately leads to a “yes or no” answer as to whether the corresponding disorder is present in the subject.




Specifically, this invention provides a method of determining whether a subject is afflicted with a disorder characterized by the presence of a known nucleic acid mutation, which comprises the steps of (a) isolating a sample of nucleic acid molecules from the subject; (b)(i) amplifying the nucleic acid segment present in the isolated sample, which segment is known to contain the mutation in a subject afflicted with the disorder, and (ii) under suitable conditions, contacting the resulting amplified segment with a catalytic nucleic acid molecule which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (1) in the nucleic acid segment having the known mutation or (2) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, with the proviso that step (ii) can be performed either subsequent to or concurrently with step (i); and (c) determining whether the catalytic nucleic acid molecule in step (b)(ii) cleaves the amplified segment, so as to determine whether the subject is afflicted with the disorder.




This invention also provides a method of determining whether a subject is afflicted with a disorder characterized by the presence of a plurality of known nucleic acid mutations, which comprises the steps of (a) isolating a sample of nucleic acid molecules from the subject; (b)(i) amplifying the nucleic acid segment present in the isolated sample, which segment is known to contain the plurality of mutations in a subject afflicted with the disorder, and (ii) under suitable conditions, contacting the resulting amplified segment with a plurality of catalytic nucleic acid molecules, each of which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (1) in the nucleic acid segment having the known mutation or (2) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, with the proviso that step (ii) can be performed either subsequent to or concurrently with step (i); and (c) determining whether each of the catalytic nucleic acid molecules in step (b)(ii) cleaves the amplified segment, so as to determine whether the subject is afflicted with the disorder.




This invention further provides a method of determining whether a subject is afflicted with a disorder characterized by the presence of a plurality of known nucleic acid mutations, which comprises the steps of (a) isolating a sample of nucleic acid molecules from the subject; (b) (i) amplifying the nucleic acid segments present in the isolated sample, which segments collectively are known to contain the plurality of mutations in a subject afflicted with the disorder, and (ii) under suitable conditions, contacting the resulting amplified segments with a plurality of catalytic nucleic acid molecules, each of which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (1) in one of the nucleic acid segments having one of the known mutations or (2) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, with the proviso that step (ii) can be performed either subsequent to or concurrently with step (i); and (c) determining whether each of the catalytic nucleic acid molecules in step (b)(ii) cleaves the amplified segment containing its respective target sequence, so as to determine whether the subject is afflicted with the disorder.




The instant methods can be used to diagnose disorders in any subject. As used herein, “subject” means any animal, including, for example, mice, rats, dogs, guinea pigs, ferrets, rabbits, and primates. In the preferred embodiment, the subject is a human.




The disorder diagnosed by the instant invention can be any disorder characterized by the presence of at least one known nucleic acid mutation, which mutation is missing when such disorder is absent. Such disorders are well known in the art and include, by way of example, cancer, AIDS, cystic fibrosis, muscular dystrophy, α1-anti-trypsin deficiency, phenylketonuria, sickle cell anemia or trait, and various other hemoglobinopathies. In one embodiment, the disorder is selected from the group consisting of cancer, AIDS, and cystic fibrosis. In the preferred embodiment, the disorder is cancer. In the Experimental Details section which follows, numerous examples are given of specific mutations, target sequences containing same, and catalytic nucleic acids used for diagnosing such disorders as cancer, AIDS and cystic fibrosis.




As used herein, “catalytic nucleic acid molecule” means a DNA molecule (also known in the art as a “DNAzyme”) or RNA molecule (also known in the art as a “ribozyme”) which specifically recognizes and cleaves a distinct target nucleic acid sequence. For both DNAzymes and ribozymes, the target nucleic acid sequence can be either DNA or RNA.




The nucleic acid sequence in which the known disorder-characterizing mutation(s) resides (i.e., the sequence amplified in the instant methods) can be a DNA or RNA sequence. These mutation(s) include, for example, point mutations, deletion mutations, insertion mutations and frame-shift mutations. Each of the amplified nucleic acid segment and catalytic nucleic acid molecule can be either DNA or RNA. In one embodiment, the amplified nucleic acid segment is RNA and the catalytic nucleic acid molecule is either DNA or RNA. In a further embodiment, the amplified nucleic acid segment is DNA and the catalytic nucleic acid molecule is either RNA or DNA (25).




Methods for isolating and amplifying nucleic acid molecules used in the instant invention are well known in the art. More specifically, methods of isolating a sample of nucleic acid molecules from the subject include, for example, phenol chloroform extraction, quick lysis, capture on columns and polymer capture (20, 26-29). Methods of amplifying a nucleic acid sequence include, for example, PCR, LCR, SDA and TMA (also known as (SSR)) (1-11).




Suitable conditions for contacting an amplified nucleic acid segment containing a target sequence with a catalytic nucleic acid molecule so as to permit specific recognition and cleavage of the target sequence are well known in the art. In addition, such conditions are exemplified in the Experimental Details section below.




Methods of determining whether a catalytic nucleic acid molecule cleaves an amplified nucleic acid segment are also routine in the art. Such methods include, by way of example, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and capillary electrophoresis (20, 30).




In the preferred embodiment of this invention, (a) the amplification is performed using a polymerase chain reaction; (b) the catalytic nucleic acid molecule is a 10-23 DNAzyme; and (c) the polymerase chain reaction employs a DNA primer (i.e., a “chimeric” primer) suitable for initiating amplification of the segment, which primer contains at least one purine ribonucleotide residue which serves as the 5′ side of the site within the amplified segment recognized and cleaved by the 10-23 DNAzyme. This purine ribonucleotide residue in the chimeric primer is required for cleavage by the 10-23 DNAzyme. Thus, using this chimeric primer permits the 10-23 DNAzyme cleavage site to be generated in a PCR reaction. The chimeric primer can also include, for example, a ribonucleotide residue that serves as the 3′ side of the site recognized and cleaved by the 10-23 DNAzyme.




In one form of this embodiment, the amplified segment is recognized and cleaved in trans by the DNAzyme. In another form, (a) the polymerase chain reaction employs a second DNA primer suitable for initiating amplification of the segment, which second primer comprises a zymogene encoding a 10-23 DNAzyme such that, upon amplification, the resulting amplified nucleic acid molecule comprises the 10-23 DNAzyme; and (b) the amplified nucleic acid segment is recognized and cleaved in cis by the DNAzyme.




As used herein, “cis” cleavage by a DNAzyme shall mean that the DNAzyme recognizes and cleaves a sequence coexisting therewith on the same amplified nucleic acid molecule. Trans cleavage shall mean that the DNAzyme cleaves a substrate located on a different molecule. Finally, “zymogene” shall mean a nucleic acid sequence which comprises the anti-sense (i.e. complementary) sequence of a catalytic nucleic acid molecule, and whose transcription product is the catalytic nucleic acid molecule itself.




This invention still further provides kits for use in practicing the instant diagnostic methods. The first instant kit comprises (a) a catalytic nucleic acid molecule which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (i) in a nucleic acid segment having a mutation known to be characteristic of a disorder or (ii) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, and (b) a nucleic acid reagent suitable for use in amplifying the nucleic acid segment containing the target sequence.




In one embodiment, the kit comprises a plurality of catalytic nucleic acid molecules. The nucleic acid reagent suitable for use in amplifying the nucleic acid segment containing the target sequence can be, for example, a nucleic acid primer. In one embodiment, the kit comprises a plurality of such nucleic acid reagents.




More specifically, the second instant kit comprises (a) a 10-23 DNAzyme which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (i) in a nucleic acid segment having a mutation known to be characteristic of a disorder or (ii) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, and (b) a DNA primer suitable for initiating amplification of the segment under polymerase chain reaction conditions, which primer contains at least one purine ribonucleotide residue which serves as the 5′ side of the site within the amplified segment recognized and cleaved by the 10-23 DNAzyme.




The third instant kit comprises (a) a first DNA primer which comprises a zymogene encoding a 10-23 DNAzyme that specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (i) in a nucleic acid segment having a mutation known to be characteristic of a disorder or (ii) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, which first primer is suitable for initiating amplification of the segment under polymerase chain reaction conditions; and (b) a second DNA primer suitable for initiating amplification of the segment under polymerase chain reaction conditions, which second primer contains at least one purine ribonucleotide residue which serves as the 5′ side of the site within the amplified segment recognized and cleaved by the 10-23 DNAzyme, such that, upon amplification, (i) the resulting amplified nucleic acid molecule comprises the 10-23 DNAzyme, and (ii) the amplified nucleic acid segment is recognized and cleaved in cis by the DNAzyme.




In one embodiment, the instant kits further comprise one or more of the following: (a) reagents useful for isolating a sample of nucleic acid molecules from a subject being diagnosed; (b) reagents useful for amplifying a nucleic acid segment present in the isolated sample, which segment is known to contain a mutation in a subject afflicted with the disorder; and (c) reagents useful for creating suitable reaction conditions for catalytic nucleic acid activity. The reagents in components (a)-(c) of the instant kits can either be obtained commercially or made according to well known methods in the art, as exemplified in the Experimental Details section below.




The components of the instant kits can be in solution or lyophilized as appropriate. In one embodiment, the components of the instant kits are in the same compartment, and in another embodiment, the components of the instant kit are in separate compartments. In the preferred embodiment, the kits further comprise instructions for use.











This invention will be better understood by reference to the Experimental Details which follow, but those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that the specific experiments detailed are only illustrative of the invention as described more fully in the claims which follow thereafter.




EXPERIMENTAL DETAILS




The examples of DNAzymes and ribozymes listed below are based on a 10-23 DNAzyme (19) and are designed to cleave the following medically important targets. The examples of ribozymes listed below are based on the hammerhead ribozyme (12).




I. DNAzymes




where




R=purine, either A or G.




Y=pyrimidine, either C, T or U.




H=A, T, U, or C (not G).




D=A, T, U, or G (not C).




B=C, T, U, or G (not A).




V=A, C, or G (not T, not U).




W=T, U, or A.




italics=bases which are artificially introduced by in vitro amplification using primers containing bases which are mismatched with respect to the target sequence.




bold=target base or sequence for analysis.




underlined=recognition site (RY/R).




E=modified sequence (primer-induced artificial sequence).












A. Acquired Disease






(1) Cancer






(a) K-ras codon 12, position 2 - mutant (G to C, U or A)




















5′ - GUU GGA GCU GGU GGC GUA GGC - 3′




wildtype




 SEQ ID NO:1







RNA













5′ - GUU GGA GCU


G


Y




U GGC GUA GGC - 3′




mutant RNA




 SEQ ID NO:2













3′ - CAA CCT CGA  


R


A CCG CAT CCG - 5′




DNAzyme




 SEQ ID NO:3






              A  G






             G    G






            C      C






           A        T






            A      A






             C    G






              A  C






                T













5′ - GUU GGA GCU G


A


U GGC GUA GGC - 3′




mutant RNA




 SEQ ID NO:4













3′ - CAA CCU CGA C


U


A CCG CAU CCG - 5′




antisense













5′ - GCC UAC GCC


A


U




C AGC UCC AAC - 3′




antisense




 SEQ ID NO:5













3′ - CGG ATG CGG  


A


G TCG AGG TTG - 5′




DNAzyme




 SEQ ID NO:6






              A   G






             G     G






            C       C






           A         T






            A       A






             C     G






              A   C






                T


















(b) K-ras codon 13, position 1 - mutant (G to A, U or C)




















5′ - GGA GCU GGU GGC GUA GGC AAG - 3′




wildtype




 SEQ ID NO:7







RNA













5′ - GGA GCU G


GU





H


GC GUA GGC AAG - 3′




mutant RNA




 SEQ ID NO:8













3′ - CCT CGA C


A


 DCG CAT CCG TTC - 5′




DNAzyme




 SEQ ID NO:9






            A  G






           G    G






          C      C






         A        T






          A      A






           C    G






            A  C






              T


















(c) H-ras codon 61, position 1 - mutant (C to G, U or A)




















5′ - ACC GCC GGC CAG GAG GAG - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:10







RNA













5′ - ACC GCC G


GC





D


AG GAG GAG - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:11













3′ - TGG CGG C


G


 HTC CTC CTC - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:12






            A  G






           G    G






          C      C






         A        T






          A      A






           C    G






            A  C






              T


















(d) H-ras codon 61, position 2 - mutant (A to C, G or U)




















5′ - ACC GCC GGC C


A


G GAG GAG - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:13







RNA













3′ - UGG CGG CCG G


U




C







G




UC CUC - 5′





wildtype








RNA













5′ - CUC CU




G







C




U


G GCC GGC GGU - 3′





wildtype





SEQ ID NO:14







RNA













3′ - GAG GA  


G


AC CGG CCG CCA - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:15






         A   G






        G     G






       C       C






      A         T






       A       A






        C     G






         A   C






           T



















(e) H-ras codon 61, position 3 - mutant




(G to C or U)






(Note; G to A is a silent mutation)




















5′ - ACC GCC GGC CAG GAG GAG - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:16







RNA













5′ - ACC GCC GGC CA


Y


 GAG GAG - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:17













3′ - UGG CGG CCG GU


R


 CUC CUC - 5′




antisense













5′ - CUC CUC




R


U


G GCC GGC GGU - 3′




antisense




SEQ ID NO:18













3′ - GAG GAG  


A


C CGG CCG CCA - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:19






          A   G






         G     G






        C       C






       A         T






        A       A






         C     G






          A   C






            T


















(f) N-ras codon 61, position 1 - mutant (C to A, G or U)




















5′ - GCU GGA CAA GAA GAG - 3′




wildtype RNA




SEQ ID NO:20













5′ - GCU GGA


D


AA GAA GAG - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:21













3′ - CGA CCU


H


U


G


 CUU CUC - 5′





mutant RNA





SEQ ID NO:22













5′ - CUC UUC




G


U




H


 UCC AGC - 3′





mutant RNA





SEQ ID NO:23













3′ - GAG AAG  


A


D AGG TCG - 5′




DNAzyme






          A   G






         G     G






        C       C






       A         T






        A       A






         C     G






          A   C






            T













5′ - GCU GG


A







U




AA GAA GAG - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:24













3′ - CGA CC  


A


TT CTT CTC - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:25






         A   G






        G     G






       C       C






      A         T






       A       A






        C     G






         A   C






           T


















(2) HIV 1 - AZT Resistance, Point Mutations













(a) Codon 41 - mutant (A to U or C)




















5′ - UGU ACA GAA AUG GAA AAG - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:26







RNA













5′ - UGU ACA GA


A







Y




UG GAA AAG - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:27













3′ - ACA TGT CT  


R


AC CTT TTC - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:28






             A   G






            G     G






           C       C






          A         T






           A       A






            C     G






             A   C






               T


















(b) Codon 70 - mutant (A to G)




















5′ - GAC AGU ACU AAA UGG AGA AAA - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:29







RNA













5′ - GAC AGU ACU A


G




A


 UGG AGA AAA - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:30













3′ - CTG TCA TGA TC  


A


CC TCT TTT - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:31






                 A   G






                G     G






               C       C






              A         T






               A       A






                C     G






                 A   C






                   T


















(c) Codon 215 - mutant (C to U or A)




















5′ - AGG UGG GGA UUU ACC ACA CCA GAC - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:32







RNA













5′ - AGG UGG GGA UUU


A


U




C ACA CCA GAC - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:33













3′ - TCC ACC CCT AAA  


A


G TGT GGT CTG - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:34






                  A   G






                 G     G






                C       C






               A         T






                A       A






                 C     G






                  A   C






                    T













5′ - AGG UGG GGA UUU A




A


C


 ACA CCA GAC - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:35













3′ - TCC ACC CCT AAA T


G


 TGT GGT CTG - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:36






                    A  G






                   G    G






                  C      C






                 A        T






                  A      A






                   C    G






                    A  C






                      T


















(d) Codon 74 - mutant (U to G confers ddT resistance)




















5′ - AAA UGG AGA AAA UUA GUA GAU - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:37







RNA













5′ - AAA UGG AGA AAA




G


U


A GUA GAU - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:38













3′ - TTT ACC TCT TTT  


A


T CAT CTA - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:39






                 A   G






                G     G






               C       C






              A         T






               A       A






                C     G






                 A   C






                   T













B. Inherited Disease













(1) Cystic Fibrosis













(a) Codon 542 - wildtype













5′ - UAGUUCUU


G


GAGAAGGU - 3′




wildtype RNA




SEQ ID NO:40













5′ - UAGUUC




G


U




G


GAGAAGGU - 3′





wildtype RNA





SEQ ID NO:41













3′ - ATCAAG


A


CCTCTTCCA - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:42






         A  G






        G    G






       C      C






      A        T






       A      A






        C    G






         A  C






           T













Codon 542 - mutant (G to U)













5′ - UAGUUCUU


U


GAGAAGGU - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:43













5′ - UAGUUC




G


U




U


GAGAAGGU - 3′





mutant RNA





SEQ ID NO:44













3′ - ATCAAG


A


ACTCTTCCA - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:45






         A   G






        G     G






       C       C






      A         T






       A       A






        C     G






         A   C






           T













(b) Codon 551 - wildtype













5′ - GAGUGGAG


G


UCAACGAG - 3′




wildtype RNA




SEQ ID NO:46













3′ - CUCACCUC


C


AGUUGCUC - 5′




antisense













5′ - CUCGUUG


A


C




CUCCACUC - 3′




antisense




SEQ ID NO:47













3′ - GAGCAAC


G


GAGGTGAG - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:48






          A  G






         G    G






        C      C






       A        T






        A      A






         C    G






          A  C






            T













Codon 551 - mutant (G to A)













5′ - GAGUGGAG




A


U


CAACGAG - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:49













3′ - CUCACCUCUAGUUGCUC - 5′




antisense













5′ - CUCGUUG


A


U




CUCCACUC - 3′




antisense




SEQ ID NO:50













3′ - GAGCAAC


A


GAGGTGAG - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:51






          A  G






         G    G






        C      C






       A        T






        A      A






         C    G






          A  C






            T













(c) Codon 508 - wildtype













5′ - GAAAUAUC


AU




CUU


UGGUGUUU - 3′




wildtype RNA




SEQ ID NO:52













3′ - CTTTATAG


A


GAAACCACAAA - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:53






           A  G






          G    G






         C      C






        A        T






         A      A






          C    G






           A  C






             T













Codon 508 - mutant (CTT deletion)













5′ - AAAUAUC


AU


UGGUGUUU - 5′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:54













3′ - TTTATAG


A


ACCACAAA - 3′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:55






          A  G






         G    G






        C      C






       A        T






        A      A






         C    G






          A  C






            T













(2) al-antitrypsin













Codon 342 - mutant (G to A)













5′ - GACCAUCGACGAGAAAGG - 3′




wildtype RNA




SEQ ID NO:56













5′ - GACCAUCG


AC




A


AGAAAGG - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:57













3′ - CTGGTAGC


G


TTCTTTCC - 5′




DNAzyme




SEQ ID NO:58






           A  G






          G    G






         C      C






        A        T






         A      A






          C    G






           A  C






             T


















II. Ribozymes













where bold = target base for analysis.






underlined = recognition site (UH).













A. Acquired Disease













(1) Cancer













K-ras codon 12, position 1 - mutant (G to A, C or U)




















5′ - GUA GUU GGA GCU GGU GGC GUA - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:59







RNA













5′ - GUA GUU GGA GC


U







H




GU GGC GUA - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:60













3′ - CAU CAA CCU CGA  CA CCG CAU - 5′




Ribozyme




SEQ ID NO:61






                  A  C






                  A   U






                  G  A  G






                  C  G G A






                  A  U  U






                  G  C






                  G  C






                 A    G






                  G  U


















K-ras codon 12, position 2 - mutant (G to U)




















5′ - GUU GGA GCU GGU GGC GUA GGC- 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:62







RNA













5′ - GUU GGA GCU G




U


U


 GGC GUA GGC- 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:63













3′ - CAA CCU CGA CA  CCG CAU CCG- 5′




Ribozyme




SEQ ID NO:64






                 A  C






                 A   U






                 G  A  G






                 C  G G A






                 A  U  U






                 G  C






                 G  C






                A    G






                 G  U













(2) HIV 1 - AZT resistance













(a) Codon 41 - mutant (A to U or C)













5′ - UGU ACA GAA AUG GAA AAG - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:26







RNA













5′ - UGU ACA GAA


Y


UG GAA AAG - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:27













3′ - ACA UGU CUU


R


AC CUU UUC - 5′




antisense




SEQ ID NO:65













5′ - CUU UUC CA


R





UU


C UGU ACA - 3′




antisense




SEQ ID NO:66













3′ - GAA AAG GUY A G ACA UGU - 5′




Ribozyme






                 A  C






                 A   U






                 G A  G






                 C G G A






                 A U  U






                 G C






                 G C






                A   G






                 G U













(b) Codon 70 - mutant (A to G)













5′ - GAC AGU ACU AAA UGG AGA AAA - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:29







RNA













5′ - GAC AGU ACU A


G


A UGG AGA AAA - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:30













3′ - CUG UCA UGA UCU ACC UCU UUU - 5′




antisense













5′ - UUU UCU CCA U


C




U





A


GU ACU GUC - 3′




antisense




SEQ ID NO:67













3′ - AAA AGA GGU AGA  CA UGA CAG - 5′




Ribozyme




SEQ ID NO:68






                  A   C






                  A    U






                  G  A  G






                  C  G G A






                  A  U  U






                  G  C






                  G  C






                 A    G






                  G  U













(c) Codon 215 - mutant (C to U or A)













5′ - AGG UGG GGA UUU ACC ACA CCA GAC - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:32







RNA













5′ - AGG UGG GGA UUU A


W


C ACA CCA GAC - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:69













3′ - UCC ACC CCU AAA U


W


G UGU GGU CUG - 5′




antisense













5′ - GUC UGG UGU G


W




U





A


AA UCC CCA CCU - 3′




antisense




SEQ ID NO:70













3′ - CAG ACC ACA CWA  UU AGG GGU GGA - 5′




Ribozyme




SEQ ID NO:71






                  A   C






                  A    U






                  G  A  G






                  C  G G A






                  A  U  U






                  G  C






                  G  C






                 A    G






                  G  U


















(d) Codon 74 - mutant (U to G confers ddT resistance)




















5′ - AAA UGG AGA AAA UUA GUA GAU - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:37







RNA













5′ - AAA UGG AGA AAA


G




UA


 GUA GAU - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:38













3′ - UUU ACC UCU UUU CA  CAU CUA - 5′




Ribozyme




SEQ ID NO:72






                     A   C






                     A    U






                     G  A  G






                     C  G G A






                     A  U  U






                     G  C






                     G  C






                    A    G






                     G  U













B. Inherited Disease













(1) Cystic Fibrosis













(a) Codon 542 - wildtype













5′ - UAGUUC


UU




G


GAGAAGGUGGA - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:40







RNA






3′ - AUCAAGA CCUCUUCCACCU - 5′




Ribozyme




SEQ ID NO:73






           A  C






           A   U






           G A  G






           C G G A






           A U  U






           G C






           G C






          A   G






           G U













Codon 542 - mutant (G to U)













5′ - UAGUUC


UU




U


GAGAAGGU - 5′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:43













3′ - AUCAAGA ACUCUUCCA - 3′




Ribozyme




SEQ ID NO:74






           A  C






           A   U






           G A  G






           C G G A






           A U  U






           G C






           G C






          A   G






           G U













(b) Codon 551 - wildtype













5′ - GAGUGGAG


G




UC


AACGAG - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:46






RNA













3′ - CUCACCUCCA UUGCUC - 5′




Ribozyme




SEQ ID NO:75






              A  C






              A   U






              G A  G






              C G G A






              A U  U






              G C






              G C






             A   G






              G U













Codon 551 - mutant (G to A)













5′ - GAGUGGAG


A




UC


AACGAG - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:49













3′ - CUCACCUCUA UUGCUC - 5′




Ribozyme




SEQ ID NO:76






              A  C






              A   U






              G A  G






              C G G A






              A U  U






              G C






              G C






             A   G






              G U













(c) Codon 508 - wildtype













5′ - GAAAUAUCAU


C






UU




UGGUGUUU - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:52







RNA













3′ - CUUUAUAGUAGA ACCACAAA - 5′




Ribozyme




SEQ ID NO:77






                A  C






                A   U






                G A  G






                C G G A






                A U  U






                G C






                G C






               A   G






                G U






                 or













Codon 508 - mutant (CUU deletion)













5′ - GAAAUAUC


A






UU




GGUGUUU - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:52













3′ - CUUUAUAGUA CCACAAA - 5′




Ribozyme




SEQ ID NO:78






              A C






              A U






              G A  G






              C G G A






              A U  U






              G C






              G C






             A   G






              G U


















(2) β-Globin













β+- black (poly A signal) - mutant (U to C)




















5′ - UCUGCCUAA


U


AAAAAACAU - 3′




wildtype




SEQ ID NO:79







RNA













5′ - UCUGCCUAA


C


AAAAAACAU - 3′




mutant RNA




SEQ ID NO:80













3′ - AGACGGAUU


G


UUUUUUGUA - 5′




antisense













5′ - AUGUUUUUU


G




UU


AGGCAGA - 3′




antisense




SEQ ID NO:81













3′ - UACAAAAAACA UCCGUCU - 5′




Ribozyme




SEQ ID NO:82






              A C






              A U






              G A  G






              C G G A






              A U  U






              G C






              G C






             A   G






              G U











III. K-ras Analysis Using Ribozymes




A. Ribozymes Targeting Mutations at K-ras Codon 12




The sequence of the human K-ras gene at codon 12 is GGT. Point mutations are frequently observed in the first 2 bases in this sequence in association with cancer of the pancreas, lung and colon. Two ribozymes were designed to cleave mutant but not wild-type K-ras.















K-ras




5′...AGUUGGAGC


U


H




GUGGCGUAGG... 3′







Ribozyme I




3′   UCAACCUCGA CACCGCAUCC    5′








             A  C








             A   U








             G A  G








             C G G A








             A U  U








             G C








             G C








            A   G








             G U











(K-ras codon 12-bold; Ribozyme target doublet—underlined)




Ribozyme I, above, is designed to cleave all RNA molecules which contain a point mutation at the first position of codon 12, but is designed not to cleave the wild-type sequence. The target sequence for the ribozyme is UH where H can equal C, U or A, but not G. Since the wild-type sequence is G at this position, all mutations will be cleaved with this ribozyme.















K-ras




5′...UUGGAGCU


G


UU




GGCGUAGGCA... 3′







Ribozyme II




3′   AACCUCGACA CCGCAUCCGU    5′








             A  C








             A   U








             G A  G








             C G G A








             A U  U








             G C








             G C








            A   G








             G U











(K-ras codon 12 mutant allele—bold; Ribozyme target doublet—underlined)




Ribozyme II is designed to target G to U substitutions at position 2 of codon 12. The wild-type sequence G cannot base pair with the A at the first position within the hybridizing arms of the ribozyme, and hence the wild-type sequence is not expected to be cleaved with this ribozyme.




DNA sequences encoding ribozymes I and II were synthesized by Macromolecular Resources (Fort Collins, Colo.). The antisense and sense strands of the ribozymes were annealed and cloned into the vector pSP70 (Promega Corporation, Madison, Wis.) behind the T7 polymerase promoter. These clones were linearized at a site 3′ to the ribozyme by digestion with Nde I, then purified. Radiolabelled ribozymes were prepared by standard in vitro RNA transcription reactions which incorporated [alpha-


32


P] UTP using these templates (20).




B. Preparation of K-ras Templates




The human cell lines SW480 and Calu I were obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (Rockville, Md.). The colon carcinoma cell line SW480 has a homozygous mutation (GTT) at position 2 within codon 12 of K-ras. Calu 1 is a lung carcinoma cell line which is heterozygous at position 1 within K-ras codon 12 having both wild-type (GGT) and mutant (TGT) alleles.




K-ras DNA templates (4 mutant and 1 wild-type at codon 12) were generated by PCR amplification of Calu 1 and SW480 DNA, as well as pUC plasmid clones which contained K-ras inserts that were mutant at codon 12. The sequence of the 5′ PCR primer was (SEQ ID NO:87) TGGACTTAATACGACTCACTATAGGGCGACTGAATATAAACTTGTGGTAG. This 5′ primer incorporated the T7 promoter at the 5′ end. The sequence of the 3′ primer was (SEQ ID NO:88) CCTCTATTGTTGGATCATATTCG. Radiolabelled K-ras RNA templates were generated by using the T7/K-ras PCR products in standard in vitro RNA transcription reactions which incorporated [alpha-


32


P] UTP (20).




C. Detection of Point Mutations




In vitro cleavage experiments were performed as follows. Ribozyme and substrate were incubated in cleavage buffer (10 mM MgCl


2


; 250 mM Tris.Cl, pH 7.5) in a 4:1 molar ratio. The ribozymes I and II were incubated with the radiolabelled K-ras RNA templates at 50° C. for 6 hr to assess in vitro cleavage ability. Reactions were analyzed by polyacryamide gel electrophoresis. Ribozyme I successfully cleaved K-ras RNA which contained a C, A or U mutation at codon 12 position 1 but was unable to cleave the wild-type sequence G. Ribozyme II successfully cleaved K-ras RNA which contained a U mutation at codon 12 position 2 but was unable to cleave the wild-type sequence G. The presence of cleaved K-ras RNA is therefore diagnostic for the presence of point mutations at codon 12.




This analysis demonstrates the ability of catalytic nucleic acids to specifically cleave templates in vitro which provides the basis for diagnose the presence of mutant sequences associated with disease. Nucleic acid can be amplified by a variety of techniques, e.g., PCR or TMA, and then cleaved with catalytic nucleic acids, e.g., DNAzyme (10-23 model) or ribozyme. The method can be used for detection of point mutations in K-ras which are specifically associated with cancer of the lung, colon and pancreas. The approach can be applied to diagnosis of any disease which is characterized by the presence of either an acquired or inherited genetic mutation.




IV. K-ras Mutation Analysis Using 10-23 DNAzymes and Chimeric Primers




Walder, et al. (38) have previously shown that Taq DNA polymerase can extend DNA/RNA chimeric primers that contain one or two 3′ terminal ribose residues. Santoro and Joyce (19) showed cleavage of DNA/RNA chimeric substrates by the 10-23 DNAzyme. Chimeric primers are used here to produce PCR amplicons that serve as substrates for the 10-23 DNAzyme.




A. Use of DNAzymes for Distinguishing Variant Alleles; Targeting Sequences with DNAzymes Supplied In Trans




Cleavage of a DNAzyme substrate produced from a chimeric primer can be achieved by adding a chemically synthesised DNAzyme to the PCR mix. In such a reaction, the DNAzyme cleaves the substrate in the trans orientation.




(1) DNAzymes Targeting Mutations at K-ras Codon 12; Natural Cleavage Site




(a) Strategy




PCR using a 5′ DNA/RNA chimeric primer (5K42r) and a 3′ primer (3K2) amplified a region of the K-ras gene. 5K42r hybridized to the K-ras sequence adjacent to codon 12 and contained the purine:pyrimidine residues which formed the potential DNAzyme cleavage site. The chimeric primer is fully complementary to the K-ras sequence that thus provided a natural cleavage site for a 10-23 DNAzyme. Extension from the 3′ end of 5K42r by Taq DNA polymerase amplified codon 12 of the K-ras gene. A DNAzyme, Dz1, was designed to cleave amplicons that harbor wild-type sequence at codon 12 of K-ras. The 5′ arm of the DNAzyme was fully complementary to sequences that are wild-type at codon 12. Mutations at K-ras codon 12, which result in mismatches with the 5′ DNAzyme-hybridizing arm, were predicted to significantly decrease the efficiency of DNAzyme cleavage.




(b) Primer and DNAzyme Sequences















SEQ ID NO:89




5′TATAAACTTGTGGTAGTTGGAGCT


GGT


GGCGTAGGCAA 3′




K-ras








5′TATAAACTTGTGGTAGTTGGAgcT 3′ SEQ ID NO:90




“5K42r” Primer







3′      TGAACACCATCAACCT GACCACCG 5′ SEQ ID NO:91




“Dz1” DNAzyme







                      A G







                     G   G







                    C     C







                   A       T







                   A       A







                    C      G







                     A T C











(Codon 12 in the K-ras wild-type sequence is underlined and the ribonucleotide bases in the primer 5K42r are in lower case letters.)




A further PCR primer, 3K2, was designed to produce an 82 base-pair amplicon when amplified with 5K42r. The sequence of 3K2 is:




5° CGTCCACAAAATGATTCTGA 3′ SEQ ID NO:92 “3K2” Primer




The primers and DNAzyme were synthesised by Pacific Oligos Pty. Ltd. (Lismore, NSW, Australia) or Oligos Etc., Inc. (Wilsonville, Oreg., USA). The DNAzyme Dz1 was modified by adding a 3′ phosphate group to prevent extension by Taq DNA polymerase. The 5′ primer, 5K42r, was 5′ end-labelled with gamma-


32


P by incubating 25 μl of 20 uM primer with 2.5 ul of Polynucleotide Kinase (10×10


3


U/ml, 3′ phosphatase-free, Boehringer Mannheim), 2.5 μl RNasin (40 U/μl Recombinant RNasin®, Ribonuclease Inhibitor, Promega), 5 μl of polynucleotide kinase buffer (Boehringer Mannheim), 10 μl of gamma-


32


P Adenosine 5′-Triphosphate (2.5 uM, Stable Label Gold™, Bresatec) and 5 μl of DEPC water for 30 minutes at 37° C.




(c) Preparation of K-ras Templates




pUC 18 plasmid vectors containing K-ras exon 1 sequences, which were either wild-type (GGT) or mutated at codon 12 (CGT or AGT), were used as DNA templates for PCR.




(d) Detection of Point Mutations




PCR mixtures contained 0.2 pg/μl plasmid DNA, 10 pmole of gamma-


32


P-labelled 5K42r, 2 pmole 3K2, 1 mM DTT, 8 mM MgCl


2


, each dNTP (DATP, dCTP, dTTP, dGTP) at 100 uM, 0.4 U/μl RNasin®, and 1×buffer (100 mM NaCl with 50 mM Tris pH 8.3 at 25° C.). Duplicate reactions were set up with 0.5 uM Dz1, and single reactions without Dz1 were set up as control reactions. Six units of Taq DNA polymerase (5 U/μl AmpliTaq, Perkin-Elmer) were mixed with TaqStart™ antibody (Clontech) to give a final molar ratio of Taq DNA polymerase:TaqStart™ antibody of 1:5. The Taq DNA polymerase:TaqStart™ antibody mixture was incubated for 15 minutes at room temperature prior to addition to the PCR mix. The total reaction volumes were 50 μl. The reactions were placed in a GeneAmp PCR 9600 (Perkin-Elmer) and denatured at 94° C. for 2 minutes, then subjected to 15 cycles of 60° C. for 1 minute, followed by 94° C. for 20 seconds. The reaction was further subjected to 25 cycles of 40° C. for 1 minute followed by 94° C. for 20 seconds.




A 2.5 μl aliquot of each reaction was mixed with 2.5 μl of loading dye (97.5% formamide, 0.1% xylene cyanol, 0.1% bromophenol blue and 0.01 M EDTA), incubated at 75° C. for 2 minutes and then loaded immediately onto a pre-warmed 16% denaturing (urea) acrylamide gel. The gels were electrophoresed for approximately one hour. The PCR product and cleavage fragments were visualised by scanning the gel using a Molecular Dynamics Phosphorimager 445 S1.




Several bands were visible on the gel (data not shown). The fragments, in order of mobility from the slowest to the fastest (i.e., from the origin to the bottom of the gel) were (a) PCR amplicons (running as a doublet), (b) unincorporated primer, and (c) cleaved PCR amplicons. Small amounts of two fragments, produced by background hydrolysis at the ribonucleotide residues within the 5′primer, were also visible running between the primer and cleaved amplicons and running parallel with the cleaved amplicons. In all reactions, PCR product and unincorporated primer were visible. Reactions containing template DNA that was wild-type at codon 12 (i.e., fully complementary to the DNAzyme) contained cleaved amplicons. Reactions containing template DNA that was mutated at codon 12 (i.e., mismatched with the DNAzyme) did not contain cleaved amplicons. Only low levels of background hydrolysis products were visible at this position on the gel in these reactions.




(2) DNAzymes Targeting Mutations at K-ras Codon 12; Induced Cleavage Site




(a) Strategy




PCR using a 5′ DNA/RNA chimeric primer (5K44r) and a 3′ primer (3K2) amplified a region of the K-ras gene. 5K44r hybridized to the K-ras sequence adjacent to codon 12 and contained the purine:pyrimidine residues which formed the potential DNAzyme cleavage site. The purine ribonucleotide in 5K44r was mismatched with respect to the K-ras template where the wild-type sequence has a pyrimidine at this position. This primer therefore induces a DNAzyme cleavage site. Extension from the 3′ end of 5K44r by Taq DNA polymerase amplified codon 12 of the K-ras gene. A DNAzyme, Dz3, was designed to cleave amplicons that harbor wild-type sequence at codon 12 of K-ras. The 5′ arm of the DNAzyme was fully complementary to sequences that are wild-type at codon 12. Mutations at K-ras codon 12, which result in mismatches with the 5′ DNAzyme-hybridizing arm, were predicted to significantly decrease the efficiency of DNAzyme cleavage.




(b) Design of PCR Primers and DNAzymes














5′ TATAAACTTGTGGTAGTTGGAGCT


GGT


GGCGTAGGCAA 3′ SEQ ID NO:89




K-ras







5′TATAAACTTGTGGTAGTTGGAGgu 3′ SEQ ID NO: 93




“5K44r” Primer






3′      GAACACCATCAACCTC ACCACCGC 5′ SEQ ID NO:94




“Dz3” DNAzyme






                       A G






                      G   G






                     C     C






                    A       T






                    A       A






                     C     G






                      A T C











(Codon 12 in the K-ras wild-type sequence is underlined, and the ribonucleotide bases in the primer 5K44r are in lower case letters. The ribonucleotide “g” in the primer 5K44r is mismatched with respect to the K-ras sequence.)




A further PCR primer, 3K2, was designed to produce an 82 base-pair amplicon when amplified with 5K44r. The sequence of 3K2 is:




5′ CGTCCACAAAATGATTCTGA 3′ SEQ ID NO:92 “3K2” Primer




The primers and DNAzyme were synthesised by Pacific Oligos Pty. Ltd. (Lismore, NSW, Australia) or Oligos Etc., Inc. (Wilsonville, Oreg., USA) The DNAzyme Dz3 was modified by adding a 3′ phosphate group to prevent extension by Taq DNA polymerase. The 5′ primer, 5K44r, was 5′ end-labelled with gamma-


32


P by incubating 25 μl of 20 uM primer with 2.5 μl of polynucleotide kinase (10×10


3


U/ml, 3′ phosphatase-free, Boehringer Mannheim), 2.5 ul RNasin (40 U/μl Recombinant RNasin®, Ribonuclease Inhibitor, Promega), 5 μl of polynucleotide kinase buffer (Boehringer Mannheim), 10 μl of gamma-


32


P Adenosine 5′-Triphosphate (2.5 μM, Stable Label Gold™, Bresatec) and 5 μl of DEPC water for 30 minutes at 37° C.




(c) Preparation of K-ras Templates




pUC 18 plasmid vectors containing K-ras exon 1 sequences, which were either wild-type (GGT) or mutated at codon 12 (CGT), were used as DNA templates for PCR.




(d) Detection of Point Mutations




PCR mixtures contained 0.2 pg/μl plasmid DNA, 10 pmole of gamma-


32


P-labelled 5K44r, 2 pmole 3K2, 1 mM DTT, 8 mM MgCl


2


, each dNTP (dATP, dCTP, dTTP, dGTP) at 100 μM, 0.4 U/μl RNasin®, and 1×buffer (100 mM NaCl with 50 mM Tris pH 8.3 at 25° C.). Duplicate reactions were set up with 0.5 μM Dz3 DNAzyme, and single reactions without Dz3 were set up as control reactions. Six units of Taq DNA polymerase (5 U/μl AmpliTaq, Perkin-Elmer) were mixed with TaqStart™ antibody (Clontech) to give a final molar ratio of Taq DNA polymerase:TaqStart™ antibody of 1:5. The Taq DNA polymerase:TaqStart™ antibody mixture was incubated for 15 minutes at room temperature prior to addition to the PCR mix. The total reaction volumes were 50 μl. The reactions were placed in a GeneAmp PCR 9600 (Perkin-Elmer) and denatured at 94° C. for 2 minutes, then subjected to 30 cycles of 60° C. for 1 minute, followed by 94° C. for 20 seconds. The reaction was further subjected to 10 cycles of 50° C. for 1 minute followed by 94° C. for 20 seconds.




A 2.5 μl aliquot of each reaction was mixed with 2.5 μl of loading dye (97.5% formamide, 0.1% xylene cyanol, 0.1% bromophenol blue and 0.01 M EDTA), incubated at 75° C. for 2 minutes and then loaded immediately onto a pre-warmed 16% denaturing (urea) acrylamide gel. The gels were electrophoresed for approximately 1 hour. The PCR product and cleavage fragments were visualised by scanning the gel using a Molecular Dynamics Phosphorimager 445 S1.




Several bands were visible on the gel (data not shown). The fragments, in order of mobility from the slowest to the fastest (i.e., from the origin to the bottom of the gel) were (a) PCR amplicons (running as a doublet), (b) unincorporated primer, and (c) cleaved PCR amplicons. Small amounts of a fragment, produced by background hydrolysis at the ribonucleotide bond within the 5′primer, was also visible running parallel with the cleaved amplicons. In all reactions, PCR product and unincorporated primer were visible. Reactions containing template DNA that was wild-type at codon 12 (i.e., fully complementary to the DNAzyme) contained cleaved amplicons. Reactions containing template DNA that was mutated at codon 12 (i.e., mismatched with the DNAzyme) did not contain cleaved amplicons. Only low levels of background hydrolysis products were visible at this position on the gel in these reactions.




B. DNAzymes Targeting Mutations at K-ras Codon 12; Cleavage in cis Orientation




Cleavage of amplicons produced from a chimeric primer can also be achieved using active DNAzymes that are synthesised during PCR. In one example of such a reaction the DNAzyme is cleaving the substrate in the cis orientation.




(a) Strategy




PCR using a 5′ DNA/RNA chimeric primer (5K42r) and a 3′ zymogene primer (3K42Dz2) amplified a region of the K-ras gene. 5K42r hybridized to the K-ras sequence adjacent to codon 12 and contained the purine:pyrimidine residues which formed the potential DNAzyme cleavage site. The zymogene primer 3K42Dz2 had a 3′ region that was complementary to K-ras, and a 5′ region that contained the antisense of a DNAzyme. The zymogene primer had no inherent catalytic activity itself but, when used in conjunction with 5K42r, it facilitated the production of amplicons which had a DNAzyme cleavage site near their 5 termini and active (sense) DNAzymes at their 3′termini. The DNAzyme is designed to cleave the 5′ end of the amplicons in cis. The 5′ arm of the DNAzyme was fully complementary to sequences that are wild-type at codon 12. Mutations at K-ras codon 12, which result in mismatches with the 5′ DNAzyme arm, were predicted to significantly decrease the efficiency of DNAzyme cleavage.




(b) Primer Sequences




5′ chimeric primer 5K42r




(upper case—deoxyribonucleotide residues; lower case—ribonucleotide residues)




SEQ ID NO:90 5′ TATAAACTTGTGGTAGTTGGAgcT 3′




3′ zymogene primer 3K42Dz2 (complement (antisense) of 10:23 catalytic core in bold)




SEQ ID NO:95 5′ ACTTGTGGTAGTTGGATCGTTGTAGCTAGCCCTGGTGGCAGCTGTATCGTCAAGGCACTC 3′




The primers were synthesised by Pacific Oligos Pty. Ltd. (Lismore, NSW, Australia) or Oligos Etc., Inc. (Wilsonville, Oreg., USA). The 5′ primer, 5K42r, was 5′ end-labelled with gamma-


32


P by incubating 25 μl of 20 μM primer with 2.5 μl of polynucleotide kinase (10×10


3


U/ml, 3′ phosphatase-free, Boehringer Mannheim), 2.5 μl RNasin (40 U/μl Recombinant RNasin®, Ribonuclease Inhibitor, Promega), 5 μl of polynucleotide kinase buffer (Boehringer Mannheim), 10 μl of gamma-


32


P Adenosine 5′-Triphosphate (2.5 μM, Stable Label Gold™, Bresatec) and 5 μl of DEPC water for 30 minutes at 37° C.




(c) K-ras DNA Templates




pUC 18 plasmid vectors containing K-ras exon 1 sequences, which were either wild-type (GGT) or mutated at codon 12 (CGT or AGT), were used as DNA templates for PCR.




(d) Cleavage in cis by DNAzymes Synthesised During the PCR




PCR mixtures contained 0.2 pg/μl K-ras plasmid DNA, 10 pmole of gamma-


32


P-labelled 5K42r, 2 pmole 3K42Dz2, 1 mM DTT, 8 mM MgCl


2


, each dNTP (dATP, dCTP, dTTP, dGTP) at 100 uM, 0.4 U/μl RNasin®, and 1×buffer (100 mM NaCl with 50 mM Tris pH 8.3 at 25° C.). Duplicate reactions were set up for each DNA template. Six units of Taq DNA polymerase (5 U/μl AmpliTaq, Perkin-Elmer) were mixed with TaqStart™ antibody (Clontech) to give a final molar ratio of Taq DNA polymerase:TaqStart™ antibody of 1:5. The Taq DNA polymerase:TaqStart™ antibody mixture was incubated for 15 minutes at room temperature prior to addition to the PCR mix. The total reaction volumes were 50 μl. The reactions were placed in a GeneAmp PCR 9600 (Perkin-Elmer), denatured at 94° C. for 2 minutes, subjected to 30 cycles at 60° C. for 1 minute, followed by treatment at 94° C. for 20 seconds. The reaction was further subjected to 10 cycles at 50° C. for 1 minute, followed by treatment at 94° C. for 20 seconds.




A 2.5 μl aliquot of each reaction was mixed with 2.5 μl of loading dye (97.5% formamide, 0.1% xylene cyanol, 0.1% bromophenol blue and 0.01 M EDTA), incubated at 75° C. for 2 minutes, and then loaded immediately onto a pre-warmed 16% denaturing (urea) acrylamide gel. The gels were electrophoresed for approximately 1 hour. The PCR product and cleavage fragments were visualized by scanning the gel using a Molecular Dynamics Phosphorimager 445 S1.




Several bands were visible on the gel (data not shown). The fragments, in order of mobility from the slowest to the fastest (i.e., from the origin to the bottom of the gel) were (a) PCR amplicons (running as a doublet), (b) unincorporated primer, and (c) cleaved PCR amplicons. Small amounts of two fragments, produced by background hydrolysis at the ribonucleotide residues within the 5′primer, were also visible running between the primer and cleaved amplicons and running parallel with the cleaved amplicons. In all reactions, PCR product and unincorporated primer were visible. Reactions containing template DNA that was wild-type at codon 12 (i.e., fully complementary to the DNAzyme) contained cleaved amplicons. Reactions containing template DNA that was mutated at codon 12 (i.e., mismatched with the DNAzyme) did not contain cleaved amplicons. Only low levels of background hydrolysis products were visible at this position on the gel in these reactions.




The sequence below is an amplicon that is wild-type at position 1 of codon 12 (underlined) shown in a conformation wherein the DNAzyme (bold) is hybridizing in cis.












SEQ ID NO:96






5′ TATAAACTTGTGGTAGTTGGAgcT


G


GTGGCGTAGGCAAGAGTGC






                                                C






     3′


TGAACACCATCAACCT GACCACCG


TCGACATAGCAGTT






                       


A G








                      


G   G








                     


C     C








                    


A       T








                    


A       A








                     


C     G








                      


A T C













V. CONCLUSION




The instant diagnostic methods are advantageous. Catalytic nucleic acids can require as few as two base pairs of specific sequence to create a cleavage site. Catalytic nucleic acid dinucleotide cleavage sites occur naturally at a greater frequency than do restriction enzyme cleavage sites. Furthermore, mismatched primers can be used to induce cleavage sites for catalytic nucleic acids in the same way that mismatched primers have been used to induce artificial restriction enzyme cleavage sites.




Examples of catalytic nucleic acids which require only a dinucleotide sequence at the cleavage site are the hammerhead ribozyme and the 10-23 DNAzyme. Both these molecules also require complementarity between the hybridizing regions (arms) and the molecule to be cleaved. However these regions can be made target-specific. Although catalytic nucleic acid molecules can only cleave single-stranded nucleic acid templates, methods of generating suitable single-stranded templates are well known in the art. For example, single-stranded RNA templates can be generated by a protocol such as TMA, and single-stranded DNA can be generated by asymmetric PCR (37) or by the denaturation of double-stranded products.




The instant methods provide a new tool for sequence analysis that is potentially more flexible than analysis by RFLP. The combination of nucleic acid amplification with catalytic nucleic acid cleavage overcomes the limitations of analysis using restriction enzymes. Here, the minimum sequence requirement for cleavage has been reduced. Furthermore, since the catalytic nucleic acid must also be complementary in the hybridizing region, these regions which flank the dinucleotide cleavage site will also effect cleavage efficiency. The length of sequence scanned by one catalytic nucleic acid can therefore be greater than that scanned by a single restriction enzyme. The analysis of sequences using catalytic nucleic acids also has an advantage over other protocols since here, no protein enzymes (e.g., restriction enzymes or RNAase A) or toxic compounds are required.




REFERENCES




1. Mullis, K. B., U.S. Pat. No. 4,683,202.




2. Arnheim, N., et al., U.S. Pat. No. 4,683,195.




3. Arnheim, N., et al., U.S. Pat. No. 4,000,159.




4. Ehrlich H. A., et al., U.S. Pat. No. 4,965,188.




5. Ehrlich H. A., et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,176,995.




6. F. F. Chehab, et al. (1987)


Nature


329:293-294.




7. R. K. Saiki, et al. (1985)


Science


230:1350-1354.




8. Barany, F. (1991)


Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.


88:189-193.




9. Walker, G. T., et al. (1992)


Nucleic Acids Res.


20:1691.




10. Jonas, V., et al. (1993)


Journal of Clinical Microbiology


31:2410-2416.




11. Fahy, E., et al. (1991)


PCR Methods Appl


1: 25-33.




12. Haseloff, J. and Gerlach, W. L. (1988)


Nature


334:585-591.




13. Breaker, R. R. and Joyce, G. (1994)


Chemistry and Biology


1:223-229.




14. Koizumi, M., et al. (1989)


Nucleic Acids Research


17:7059-7069.




15. E. Otsuka and M. Koizumi, Japanese Patent No. 4,235,919.




16. Kashani-Sabet, M., et al. (1992)


Antisense Research and Development


2:3-15.




17. Raillard, S. A. and Joyce, G. F. (1996)


Biochemistry


35:11693-11701.




18. Carmi, N., et al. (1996)


Chemistry and Biology


3:1039-1046.




19. Santoro, S. W. and Joyce, G. (1997)


PNAS


94:4262-4266.




20


. Promega Protocols and Applications Guide.


Titus, D. E. (Ed), Promega Corporation (1991).




21. Watson, J. D., Tooze, J. and Kurtz, D. T. (1983)


Recombinant DNA: A short Course


. Scientific American Books, New York.




22. Antonarakis, S. E. (1989)


New England Journal of Medicine


320:153-163.




23. Perriman, R. and Gerlach, W. L. (1992)


Gene


113:157-163.




24. Nollau-Wagener, P. (1997)


Clinical Chemistry


43: 1114-1128.




25. Carmi, N., et al. (1996)


Chemistry and Biology


3:1039-1046.




26. Kramvis, A., et al. (1996)


Journal of Clinical Microbiology


34: 2731-2733.




27. Yong, S. L., Thomas , R. J. S. and Phillips, W. A. (1995)


Nucleic Acids Research


23:1640.




28. Sambrook, J., Fritsch, E. F. and Maniatis, T. (1989)


Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual,


2nd Ed., New York: Cold Spring Harbour Laboratory Press.




29. Backus, J. W., et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,582,988.




30. Wei, L., Dai-Shu, H., Ju, Y. and Andrieu, J.-M. (1994)


Nature


368; 269-271.




31. Bradley, S. M., et al., PCT International Publication No. WO 84/01389.




32. Cohen, J. B. and Levinson, A. D. (1988)


Nature


334:119-124.




33. Kumar, R. and Barbacid, M. (1988)


Oncogene


3:647-651.




34. Todd, A. V., et al. (1991)


Leukemia


5:160.




35. Levi, S., et al. (1991)


Cancer Res.


6:1079.




36. Kwok, S., et al. (1990)


Nucleic Acids Research


18:999-1005.




37. Gyllensten, U. B. and Erlich, H. A. (1988)


PNAS


95:7652-7656.




38. Walder, R. Y., et al. (1993) Nucleic Acid Research 21(18):4339-4343.







96




1


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequence K-ras codon
12, position 2-mutant (G to C, U or A)






1
guuggagcug guggcguagg c 21




2


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA





2
guuggagcug yuggcguagg c 21




3


35


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
K-ras codon 12






3
gcctacgcca rggctagcta caacgaagct ccaac 35




4


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequenceantisense to
mutant RNA for K-ras codon






4
gcccaugcca ucagcuccaa c 21




5


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequenceantisense





5
gccuacgcca ucagcuccaa c 21




6


35


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme





6
gttggagctg aggctagcta caacgaggcg taggc 35




7


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for K-ras codon 13






7
ggagcuggug gcguaggcaa g 21




8


18


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequence K-ras codon
13, position 1 - mutant (G to A, U or C)






8
ggagcuhgcg uaggcaag 18




9


34


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequence DNAzyme for
k-ras codon 13 mutant RNA






9
cttgcctacg cdaggctagc tacaacgaag ctcc 34




10


18


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencewildtype RNA
for H-ras codon 61






10
accgccggcc aggaggag 18




11


18


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for H-ras codon 61, position 1 - mutant (C to G, U or A)






11
accgccggcd aggaggag 18




12


32


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequence DNAzyme for
H-ras codon 61, position 1-mutant






12
ctcctccthg ggctagctac aacgacggcg gt 32




13


18


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencewildtype RNA
for H-ras codon 61






13
accgccggcc aggaggag 18




14


18


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
at position 2 - mutant (A to C, G or u)






14
cuccugcugg ccggcggu 18




15


32


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
H-ras codon 61






15
accgccggcc agggctagct acaacgaagg ag 32




16


18


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencewildtype RNA
for H-ras codon 61, position 3






16
accgccggcc aggaggag 18




17


18


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for H-ras codon 61, position 3 - mutant (G to C or U)






17
accgccggcc aygaggag 18




18


18


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequenceantisense of
mutant RNA for H-ras codon 61, position 3






18
cuccucrugg ccggcggu 18




19


32


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
H-ras codon 61, position 3






19
accgccggcc aggctagcta caacgagagg ag 32




20


15


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceN-ras codon
61, position 1 wildtype RNA






20
gcuggacaag aagag 15




21


15


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNa
(Cto a, G or U)






21
gcuggadaag aagag 15




22


15


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceAE mutant
RNA for N-ras codon 61






22
cucuucguhu ccagc 15




23


29


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
N-ras codon 61 position 1 - mutant (C to A, G or U)






23
gctggadagg ctagctacaa cgagaagag 29




24


15


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for N-ras codon 61, position 1






24
gcuggauaag aagag 15




25


29


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
N-ras codon 61, position 1






25
ctcttcttag gctagctaca acgaccagc 29




26


18


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencewildtype RNA
for Codon 41 of HIV 1 - AZT resistance point mutations






26
uguacagaaa uggaaaag 18




27


18


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for codon 41 of HIV 1 AZT resistance mutant with A to U or C.






27
uguacagaay uggaaaag 18




28


32


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme





28
cttttccarg gctagctaca acgatctgta ca 32




29


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencewildtype RNA
for codon 70 - mutant (A to G)






29
gacaguacua aauggagaaa a 21




30


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for codon 70 of HIV 1 - AZT Resistance






30
gacaguacua gauggagaaa a 21




31


35


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
Codon 70 HIV-1 AZT resistant mutant






31
ttttctccag gctagctaca acgactagta ctgtc 35




32


24


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencewildtype RNA
for codon 215 of HIV 1 AZT resistance point mutant






32
agguggggau uuaccacacc agac 24




33


24


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for codon 215






33
agguggggau uuaucacacc agac 24




34


38


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
codon 215 - mutant (C to U or A)






34
gtctggtgtg aggctagcta caacgaaaat ccccacct 38




35


24


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for codon 215, mutant






35
agguggggau uuaacacacc agac 24




36


38


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
codon 215 - mutant






36
gtctggtgtg ggctagctac aacgataaat ccccacct 38




37


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencewildtype RNA
for codon 74 - mutant (U to G confers ddT resistance)






37
aaauggagaa aauuaguaga u 21




38


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for codon 74






38
aaauggagaa aaguaguaga u 21




39


35


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
codon 74






39
atctactagg ctagctacaa cgattttctc cattt 35




40


17


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencewildtype RNA
for codon 542 - wildtype cystic fibrosis






40
uaguucuugg agaaggu 17




41


17


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceAE wildtype
RNA for codon 542






41
uaguucgugg agaaggu 17




42


31


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
codon 542 - Cystic Fibrosis






42
accttctcca ggctagctac aacgagaact a 31




43


17


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for Codon 542 - mutant (G to U)






43
uaguucuuug agaaggu 17




44


17


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
codon 542 - mutant (G to U)






44
uaguucguug agaaggu 17




45


31


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
cystic Fibrosis Codon 542 - mutant (G to U)






45
accttctcaa ggctagctac aacgagaact a 31




46


17


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencewildtype RNA
for Cystic fibrosis codon 551






46
gaguggaggu caacgag 17




47


17


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencecystic
fibrosis codon 551 antisense






47
cucguugacc uccacuc 17




48


31


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
Codon 551 - wildtype






48
gagtggaggg gctagctaca acgacaacga g 31




49


17


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for Codon 551 - mutant (G to A)






49
gaguggagau caacgag 17




50


17


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequenceantisense
for codon 551 - mutant (G to A)






50
cucguugauc uccacuc 17




51


31


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
Codon 51 - mutant (G to A)






51
gagtggagag gctagctaca acgacaacga g 31




52


22


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencewildtype RNA
for Codon 508 - wildtype






52
gaaauaucau cuuugguugu uu 22




53


34


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
codon 08 - wildtype






53
aaacacaaag aggctagcta caacgagata tttc 34




54


17


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for codon 508 - mutant (CTT deletion)






54
aaauaucauu gguguuu 17




55


30


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
codon 508 - mutant (CTT deletion) for Cystic fibrosis






55
aaacaccagg ctagctacaa cgagatattt 30




56


18


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencewildtype RNA
for a1-antitrypsin codon 342 - mutant (G to A)






56
gaccaucgac gagaaagg 18




57


18


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for
codon 342 a1 antitrypsin






57
gaccaucgac aagaaagg 18




58


32


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDNAzyme for
codon 342 - mutant (G to A)






58
cctttcttgg gctagctaca acgacgatgg tc 32




59


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceK-ras codon
12, position 1 wildtype RNA






59
guaguuggag cugguggcgu a 21




60


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for K-ras codon 12, position 1 - mutant (G to A, C or U)






60
guaguuggag cuhguggcgu a 21




61


42


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceRibozyme for
K-ras codon 12, position 1






61
uacgccaccu gaugaguccg ugaggacgaa agcuccaacu ac 42




62


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencewildtype RNA
K-ras codon 12, position 2 - mutant (G to U)






62
guuggagcug guggcguagg c 21




63


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencemutant RNA
for K-ras codon 12, position 2 - mutant (G to U)






63
guuggagcug uuggcguagg c 21




64


42


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequenceribozyme for
K-ras codon 12, position 2 - mutant (G to U)






64
gccuacgccc ugaugagucc gugaggacga aacagcucca ac 42




65


18


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequenceantisense
for HIV 1 AZT reistance Codon 41 mutant (A to U or C)






65
cuuuuccaru ucuguaca 18




66


39


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceRibozyme for
HIV 1 AZt resistance codon 414 - mutant (A to U or C)






66
uguacagcug augaguccgu gaggacgaaa yuggaaaag 39




67


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequenceantisense
for HIV -1 AZT resistance codon 70 - mutant (A to G)






67
uuuucuccau cuaguacugu c 21




68


42


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencehiv-1 AZT
resistance codon 70 mutant (A to G) ribozyme






68
gacaguaccu gaugaguccg ugaggacgaa agauggagaa aa 42




69


24


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceHIV - AZT
resistance Codon 215 - mutant (C to U or A)






69
agguggggau uuawcacacc agac 24




70


25


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequenceantisense of
codon 215 - mutant






70
gucugguguu gwuaaauccc caccu 25




71


45


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequenceribozyme for
codon 215 - mutant (C to U or A)






71
agguggggau ucugaugagu ccgugaggac gaaawcacac cagac 45




72


42


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceRibozyme for
HIV-1 codon 74 mutant (U to G confers ddT resistance)






72
aucuaccuga ugaguccgug aggacgaaac uuuucuccau uu 42




73


41


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceRibozyme for
codon 542 - wildtype Cystic Fibrosis






73
uccaccuucu cccugaugag uccgugagga cgaaagaacu a 41




74


38


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceRibozyme for
codon 542 - mutant (G to U)






74
accuucucac ugaugagucc gugaggacga aagaacua 38




75


38


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceRibozyme for
Codon 551 - wildtype Cystic Fibrosis






75
cucguucuga ugaguccgug aggacgaaac cuccacuc 38




76


38


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceRibozyme for
Codon 551 - mutant (G to A) of Cystic Fibrosis






76
cucguucuga ugaguccgug aggacgaaau cuccacuc 38




77


42


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceRibozyme for
Codon 508 - wildtype Cystic Fibrosis






77
aaacaccacu gaugaguccg ugaggacgaa agaugauauu uc 42




78


39


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceRibozyme for
cystic Fibrosis Codon 508 - mutant (CUU deletion)






78
aaacacccug augaguccgu gaggacgaaa ugauauuuc 39




79


19


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencebeta-globin
B+ - black (poly A signal) wildtype RNA






79
ucugccuaau aaaaaacau 19




80


19


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencebeta-globin
utant (U to C) RNA






80
ucugccuaac aaaaaacau 19




81


19


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequenceantisense
for beta-globin mutant (U to C)






81
auguuuuuug uuaggcaga 19




82


40


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceRibozyme for
beta-globin poly A signal - mutant






82
ucugccucug augaguccgu gaggacgaaa caaaaaacau 40




83


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceK-ras codon
12 target






83
aguuggagcu hguggcguag g 21




84


42


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceRibozyme I
recognizing K-ras codon 12






84
ccuacgccac cugaugaguc cgugaggacg aaagcuccaa cu 42




85


21


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceK-ras target
codon 12 mutant allele






85
uuggagcugu uggcguaggc a 21




86


42


RNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceRibozyme II
for K-ras codon 12 mutant allele






86
ugccuacgcc cugaugaguc cgugaggacg aaacagcucc aa 42




87


50


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceK-ras primer





87
tggacttaat acgactcact atagggcgac tgaatataaa cttgtggtag 50




88


23


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequenceprimer





88
cctctattgt tggatcatat tcg 23




89


38


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceK-ras wild
type sequence fragment






89
tataaacttg tggtagttgg agctggtggc gtaggcaa 38




90


24


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequence5K42r primer





90
tataaacttg tggtagttgg agct 24




91


39


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDz1 DNAzyme





91
gccaccaggg ctagctacaa cgatccaact accacaagt 39




92


20


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequence3K2 primer





92
cgtccacaaa atgattctga 20




93


24


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Combined DNA/RNA Moleculeprimer
5K44r primer






93
tataaacttg tggtagttgg aggu 24




94


39


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial SequenceDz3 DNAzyme





94
cgccaccagg ctagctacaa cgactccaac taccacaag 39




95


60


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequence3“ zymogene
primer eK42Dz2






95
acttgtggta gttggatcgt tgtagctagc cctggtggca gctgtatcgt caaggcactc 60




96


98


DNA


Artificial Sequence




Description of Artificial Sequencecodon 12
position 1 wildtype amplicon






96
tataaacttg tggtagttgg agctggtggc gtaggcaaga gtgccttgac gatacagctg 60
ccaccagggc tagctacaac gatccaacta ccacaagt 98






Claims
  • 1. A method of determining whether a subject is afflicted with a disorder characterized by the presence of a known nucleic acid mutation, which comprises the steps of(a) isolating a sample of nucleic acid molecules from the subject; (b) (i) amplifying the nucleic acid segment present in the isolated sample, which segment is known to contain the mutation in a subject afflicted with the disorder, and (ii) under suitable conditions, contacting the resulting amplified segment with a catalytic nucleic acid molecule which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (1) in the nucleic acid segment having the known mutation or (2) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, with the proviso that step (ii) can be performed either subsequent to or concurrently with step (i); and (c) determining whether the catalytic nucleic acid molecule in step (b) (ii) cleaves the amplified segment, so as to determine whether the subject is afflicted with the disorder, wherein the amplifying step and the step of contacting the amplified nucleic acid segment with catalytic nucleic acid molecule occurs in the same reaction vessel.
  • 2. A method of determining whether a subject is afflicted with a disorder characterized by the presence of a plurality of known nucleic acid mutations, which comprises the steps of(a) isolating a sample of nucleic acid molecules from the subject; (b) (i) amplifying the nucleic acid segment present in the isolated sample, which segment is known to contain the plurality of mutations in a subject afflicted with the disorder, and (ii) under suitable conditions, contacting the resulting amplified segment with a plurality of catalytic nucleic acid molecules, each of which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (1) in the nucleic acid segment having the known mutation or (2) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, with the proviso that step (ii) can be performed either subsequent to or concurrently with step (i); and (c) determining whether each of the catalytic nucleic acid molecule sin step (b)(ii) cleaves the amplified segment, so as to determine whether the subject is afflicted with the disorder, wherein the amplifying step and the step of contacting the amplified nucleic acid segment with catalytic nucleic acid molecule occurs in the same reaction vessel.
  • 3. A method of determining whether a subject is afflicted with a disorder characterized by the presence of a plurality of known nucleic acid mutations, which comprises the steps of(a) isolating a sample of nucleic acid molecules from the subject; (b) (i) amplifying the nucleic acid segments present in the isolated sample, which segments collectively are known to contain the plurality of mutations in a subject afflicted with the disorder, and (ii) under suitable conditions, contacting the resulting amplified segments with a plurality of catalytic nucleic acid molecules, each of which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (1) in one of the nucleic acid segments having one of the known mutations or (2) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, with the proviso that step (ii) can be performed either subsequent to or concurrently with step (i); and (c) determining whether each of the catalytic nucleic acid molecules in step (b)(ii) cleaves the amplified segment containing its respective target sequence, so as to determine whether the subject is afflicted with the disorder, wherein the amplifying step and the step of contacting the amplified nucleic acid segment with catalytic nucleic acid molecule occurs in the same reaction vessel.
  • 4. The method of claim 1, 2 or 3, wherein the subject is a human.
  • 5. The method of claim 1, 2 or 3, wherein the disorder is selected from the group consisting of cancer, AIDS and cystic fibrosis.
  • 6. The method of claim 5, wherein the disorder is cancer.
  • 7. The method of claim 1, 2 or 3, wherein the amplified nucleic acid segment is RNA and the catalytic nucleic acid molecule is selected from the group consisting of DNA and RNA.
  • 8. The method of claim 1, 2 or 3, wherein the amplified nucleic acid segment is DNA and the catalytic nucleic acid molecule is RNA or DNA.
  • 9. A method of determining whether a subject is afflicted with a disorder characterized by the presence of a known nucleic acid mutation, which comprises the steps of(a) isolating a sample of nucleic acid molecules from the subject; (b) (i) amplifying the nucleic acid segment present in the isolated sample using a polymerase chain reaction, which segment is known to contain the mutation in a subject afflicted with the disorder, and (ii) under suitable conditions, contacting the resulting amplified segment with a catalytic nucleic acid molecule, 10-23 DNAzyme, which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (1) in the nucleic acid segment having the known mutation or (2) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, with the proviso that step (ii) can be performed either subsequent to or concurrently with step (i); and (c) determining whether the catalytic nucleic acid molecule in step (b)(ii) cleaves the amplified segment, so as to determine whether the subject is afflicted with the disorder, wherein the polymerase chain reaction employs a DNA primer suitable for initiating amplification of the segment, which primer contains at least one purine ribonucleotide residue which serves as the 5′ side of the site within the amplified segment recognized and cleaved by the 10-23 DNAzyme.
  • 10. A method of determining whether a subject is afflicted with a disorder characterized by the presence of a plurality of known nucleic acid mutations, which comprises the steps of(a) isolating a sample of nucleic acid molecules from the subject; (b) (i) amplifying the nucleic acid segment present in the isolated sample using a polymerase chain reaction, which segment is known to contain the plurality of mutations in a subject afflicted with the disorder, and (ii) under suitable conditions, contacting the resulting amplified segment with a plurality of catalytic nucleic acid molecules wherein at least one of the catalytic nucleic acid molecules is a 10-23 DNAzyme, and wherein each of the catalytic nucleic acid molecules specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (1) in the nucleic acid segment having the known mutation or (2) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, with the proviso that step (ii) can be performed either subsequent to or concurrently with step (i); and (c) determining whether each of the catalytic nucleic acid molecules in step (b)(ii) cleaves the amplified segment, so as to determine whether the subject is afflicted with the disorder, wherein the polymerase chain reaction employs a DNA primer suitable for initiating amplification of the segment, which primer contains at least one purine ribonucleotide residue which serves as the 5′ side of the site within the amplified segment recognized and cleaved by the 10-23 DNAzyme.
  • 11. A method of determining whether a subject is afflicted with a disorder characterized by the presence of a plurality of known nucleic acid mutations, which comprises the steps of(a) isolating a sample of nucleic acid molecules from the subject; (b) (i) amplifying the nucleic acid segments present in the isolated sample using a polymerase chain reaction, which segments collectively are known to contain the plurality of mutations in a subject afflicted with the disorder, and (ii) under suitable conditions, contacting the resulting amplified segments with a plurality of catalytic nucleic acid molecules wherein at least one of the catalytic nucleic acid molecules is a 10-23 DNAzyme, and wherein each of the catalytic nucleic acid molecules specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (1) in one of the nucleic acid segments having one of the known mutations or (2) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, with the proviso that step (ii) can be performed either subsequent to or concurrently with step (i); and determining whether each of the catalytic nucleic acid molecules in step (b)(ii) cleaves the amplified segment containing its respective target sequence, so as to determine whether the subject is afflicted with the disorder, and wherein the polymerase chain reaction employs a DNA primer suitable for initiating amplification of the segment, which primer contains at least one purine ribonucleotide residue which serves as the 5′ side of the site within the amplified segment recognized and cleaved by the 10-23 DNAzyme.
  • 12. The method of claim 9, 10 or 11 wherein the amplified segment is recognized and cleaved in trans by the DNAzyme.
  • 13. The method of claim 9, 10 or 11, wherein (a) the polymerase chain reaction employs a second DNA primer suitable for initiating amplification of the segment, which second primer comprises a zymogene encoding a 10-23 DNAzyme such that, upon amplification, the resulting amplified nucleic acid molecule comprises the 10-23 DNAzyme; and (b) the amplified nucleic acid segment is recognized and cleaved in cis by the DNAzyme.
  • 14. A kit for use in practicing the method of claim 1, 2 or 3, which comprises (a) a catalytic nucleic acid molecule which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (i) in a nucleic acid segment having a mutation known to be characteristic of a disorder or (ii) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, and (b) a nucleic acid reagent suitable for use in amplifying the nucleic acid segment containing the target sequence.
  • 15. A kit for use in practicing the method of claim 9, 10 or 11 which comprises (a) a 10-23 DNAzyme which specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (i) in a nucleic acid segment having a mutation known to be characteristic of a disorder or (ii) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, and (b) a DNA primer suitable for initiating amplification of the segment under polymerase chain reaction conditions, which primer contains at least one purine ribonucleotide residue which serves as the 5′ side of the site within the amplified segment recognized and cleaved by the 10-23 DNAzyme.
  • 16. A kit for use in practicing the method of claim 13, which comprises(a) a first DNA primer which comprises a zymogene encoding a 10-23 DNAzyme that specifically recognizes and cleaves a target sequence present either (i) in a nucleic acid segment having a mutation known to be characteristic of a disorder or (ii) in the corresponding wild-type nucleic acid segment, but not both, which first primer is suitable for initiating amplification of the segment under polymerase chain reaction conditions; and (b) a second DNA primer suitable for initiating amplification of the segment under polymerase chain reaction conditions, which second primer contains at least one purine ribonucleotide residue which serves as the 5′ side of the site within the amplified segment recognized and cleaved by the 10-23 DNAzyme, such that, upon amplification, (i) the resulting amplified nucleic acid molecule comprises the 10-23 DNAzyme, and (ii) the amplified nucleic acid segment is recognized and cleaved in cis by the DNAzyme.
Parent Case Info

This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/079,651 filed Mar. 27, 1998 and entitled “Catalytic Nucleic Acid-based Diagnostic Methods.”

US Referenced Citations (1)
Number Name Date Kind
5807718 Joyce et al. Sep 1998 A
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry
Kashani-Sabet M. et al., “Reversal of the Malignant Phenotype by an Anti-ras Ribozyme”, Antisense Research and Development, vol. 2, pp. 3-15 (1992).
Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60/079651 Mar 1998 US