Claims
- 1. A method for reducing background luminescence from a solution containing unbound luminescent probes, each having a first molecule that attaches to a target molecule and having an attached luminescent moiety, and luminescent probe/target adducts, comprising:
forming quenching capture reagent molecules capable of forming an adduct with the unbound luminescent probes and having an attached quencher material effective to quench luminescence of the luminescent moiety; and placing the quencher material of the capture reagent molecules in a solution of the luminescent probe/target adducts and in a proximity to the luminescent moiety of the unbound luminescent probes to quench luminescence from the luminescent moiety when the luminescent moiety is exposed to exciting illumination.
- 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the luminescent moiety is a fluorescent moiety.
- 3. The method of claim 1, further including the steps of:
introducing the luminescent probes in a concentration greater than a concentration of the target molecules to form the solution of luminescent probe/target adducts with an excess of luminescent probes; and introducing quenching capture reagent in excess of the amount of luminescent probe/target adducts.
- 4. The method of claims 1-3, wherein the target is selected from the group consisting of double- and single stranded nucleic acid oligomers, peptides, proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates.
- 5. The method of claims 1-3, wherein the luminescent probes are selected from the group consisting of luminescence emitting moiety-labeled nucleic acid and nucleic acid analog oligomers, peptides, proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates.
- 6. The method of claims 1-3, wherein the quenching capture reagent molecule is selected from the group consisting of quencher moiety-labeled nucleic acid and nucleic acid analog oligomers, peptides, proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates.
- 7. The method of claims 1-3, wherein the luminescent moiety of the probe is fluorescent and is selected from the group consisting of organic dyes, proteins, nanostructures, and metals.
- 8. The method of claims 1-3, wherein the quenching moiety of the capture reagent molecule is selected from the group consisting of organic dyes, proteins, nanostructures, and metals.
- 9. The method of claim 1, further including:
forming the probe as a first oligonucleotide sequence labeled with the luminescent moiety; forming the quenching capture reagent molecules as a nucleotide sequence complementary to the first oligonucleotide sequence and labeled with the quencher moiety; and establishing hybridization conditions to hybridize quenching capture reagent molecules to the unbound ones of the luminescent oligonucleotide probes to place the quencher moiety proximate the luminescent moiety.
- 10. The method of claim 9 further including:
labeling the first oligonucleotide sequence at the 5′ end with the luminescent moiety; and labeling the nucleotide sequence complementary to the first oligonucleotide sequence at the 3′ end with the quencher moiety.
- 11. The method of claim 10, wherein the luminescent probe/target adducts are formed by providing a first concentration of the target molecules; adding a second concentration of the probes to the target, where the second concentration is at least 100 times greater than the first concentration; and establishing hybridization conditions that specifically hybridize the probes to the target.
- 12. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of placing the quencher moiety of the capture reagent molecules in a proximity to the luminescent moiety of the luminescent probes includes the steps of:
forming a signal probe having a first oligonucleotide sequence that is complementary to a nucleotide sequence of the target and having a luminescent label at the 3′ end and a nucleotide at the 5′ end that is complementary to a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) at one end of the target nucleotide sequence; forming the quenching capture reagent molecule effective to attach to the 5′ end of the signal probe and having a nucleotide sequence that does not hybridize adjacent to the SNP and that has the quencher moiety attached to the 5′ end of the quenching capture reagent molecule so that the quencher moiety and the luminescent label are in sufficient proximity to quench luminescence from the luminescent moiety.
- 13. The method of claim 12, further including the steps of:
forming an invader oligonucleotide probe effective to hybridize to the SNP and to the target nucleotide sequence adjacent the SNP and the first oligonucleotide sequence; establishing hybridization conditions effective to specifically hybridize the invader oligonucleotide probe and first oligonucleotide sequence to the target nucleotide sequence; and introducing an enzyme effective to cleave the signal probe at the SNP location to separate the first oligonucleotide sequence and quenching capture reagent molecule when there is a nucleotide match at the SNP location from the first oligonucleotide sequence, invader sequence, and target sequence, and hybridization occurs so that the quenching capture reagent molecule is removed from proximate the luminescent moiety and the luminescent moiety luminesces when excited by an exciting illumination and whereby the signal probe remains intact if there is a nucleotide mismatch at the SNP location and luminescence of the luminescent moiety of the unbound signal probe remains quenched.
- 14. A method for identifying SNPs comprising:
identifying a target DNA nucleotide sequence having first and second adjacent target sequences with a SNP site therebetween; forming a first oligonucleotide probe complementary to the first target sequence and ending in a selected SNP match and having a luminescent label at the 3′ end of the first probe; forming a second oligonucleotide probe complementary to the second target sequence; establishing hybridization conditions to specifically hybridize the first and second oligonucleotide probes to the first and second adjacent target sequences when a SNP match is present, wherein the first probe does not hybridize to the first target sequence if a SNP match is not present; introducing quenching capture reagent molecules having a nucleotide sequence complementary to the first oligonucleotide probes and having a quencher moiety attached to the 5′ end effective to quench luminescence when placed in an effective proximity to the luminescent moiety; establishing hybridization conditions to specifically hybridize quenching capture reagent molecules to ones of the first oligonucleotide probes that did not hybridize to a first target sequence; exciting the luminescent moiety whereby the first probes hybridized to the first target sequences luminesce and the first probes hybridized to the quenching capture reagent molecules do not luminesce; and detecting the presence or absence of luminescence to determine the presence or absence of a SNP match.
- 15. The methods of claims 8-14, wherein the first molecule of the fluorescent probes is selected from the group consisting of 2′-O-methyl RNA, peptide nucleic acid, locked nucleic acid, iso-cytosine, iso-guanine, modified nucleic acid, and nucleic acid-protein chimeras.
- 16. The methods of claims 8-13, wherein the quenching capture reagent molecules include molecules selected from the group consisting of 2′-O-methyl RNA, peptide nucleic acid, locked nucleic acid, iso-cytosine, iso-guanine, modified nucleic acid, and nucleic acid-protein chimeras.
STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERAL RIGHTS
[0001] This invention was made with government support under Contract No. W-7405-ENG-36 awarded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The government has certain rights in the invention.