The invention is in the field of analytical technology and relates to an improved procedure for determining presence of a nucleic acid in a sample. Specifically the invention provides methods useful when conducting fluorescence detection methods. In particular, it is useful for conducting (RT-)quantitative PCR (qPCR) reactions for detection of DNA and RNA involving fluorescent probes.
Diagnostic assays for the detection of infectious agents (e.g. viruses, bacteria) are complicated by the fact, that they need to test for a multitude of different analytes to be potentially present in the sample.
Current qPCR instruments can separate at most five different fluorophors, enabling the independent detection of five different analytes in a qPCR reaction. Anyway, it is often only required to detect the presence/absence of an infectious agent of interest, but not to identify it's concrete genotype or species. To this end it is possible to add several specific primer/probesets to the reaction mix, which are all labeled with the same fluorophor: A positive signal in this detection channel would then indicate the presence of (at least) one of those infections agents (without further distinction, which agent it is).
This approach however has a technical limitation: Addition of several probes labeled with one and the same fluorophore increasingly adds to the background of this detection channel. As a result, the fluorescent background signal might be too high for the detection system. In fact, none of the commercially available qPCR instruments is equipped with grey filters or other hardware, which would allow to actually decrease the overall sensitivity in a detection channel.
The document U.S. Pat. No. 6,180,349 describes a quantitative PCR Method, wherein dual-labeled fluorophore probes are carrying a fluorophore label at one end of the oligonucleotide and an appropriate quencher molecule at the other end. Efficient quenching is only possible, if fluorophore and quencher are brought in close proximity to each other. Even if a quencher is used, the quenching may not be 100%, thus increasing unspecific background noise.
Strategies to reduce the fluoresence background of a dual labeled probe are aiming to minimize the distance between fluorophore and quencher by e.g.:
All those approaches have disadvantages: Minimizing the overall oligonucleotide length is only possible to a certain extend, since it affects the specificity and Tm of the probe. Utilizing probes with “Minor Groove Binders” (MGB) or “Locked Nucleic Acids” (LNA) might compensate for the loss of specificity and Tm, but is very costly.
Internal quenchers can influence the probe specificity (through steric hindrance during hybridization) and increase the cost of probe synthesis.
Also Molecular Beacons are more expensive that conventional probes (due to licensing fees and increased overall length of those probes).
It is an object of the present invention to overcome the above mentioned problems.
The present invention relates to a method for determining the presence of a test nucleic acid in a sample according to claim 1, comprising the steps of
A test nucleic acid is a nucleic acid with a specific sequence to be tested for. The method of the invention is applicable to both to a qualitative and a quantitative determination of the presence of a test nucleic acid in a sample.
A sample can be any sample containing the test nucleic acid, e.g. body fluid sample, blood sample, tissue sample, smear sample, etc.
An amplification reaction may be any suitable amplification reaction, e.g. PCR, SDA, bDNA and others.
A fluorescent dye label is a label for fluorescently labeling an amplified test nucleic acid in a sample.
A soluble quenching dye is any dye suitable for absorbing electromagnetic radiation at the excitation wavelength and/or at the emission wave length of a given fluorescent dye.
The excitation wavelength of the fluorescent dye is the local absorption maximum at which fluorescence can be optimally induced or excited.
The emission wave length of the fluorescent dye is the local emission maximum at which fluorescence can be optimally detected.
Under optimal conditions the wave length of maximal absorbance (i.e. the local peak of the absorption spectrum) of the soluble quenching dye coincides with the excitation wavelength and/or at the emission wave length of the fluorescent dye label. However, the invention only requires said soluble quenching dye having an absorption of at least 40% of its maximal absorbance at the excitation wavelength and/or at the emission wave length of the fluorescent dye label in order for the invention to work. Preferably the soluble quenching dye has an absorption of at least 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90% or more at the excitation wavelength and/or at the emission wave length of the fluorescent dye label.
The concentration of said soluble quenching dye is 1% (w/v) or less. It can be for example 0.1% (w/v), 0.05% (w/v), 0.01% (w/v), 0.005% (w/v), 0.001% (w/v), 0.0005% (w/v), 0.0001% (w/v),or less, depending on fluorophore and quenching dye used. Essentially, the soluble quenching dye will reduce the fluorescence signal of the fluorescent dye label, thus reducing both background and specific signal. Finding the optimal concentration of soluble quenching dye is a matter of performing a simple titration: Too much quenching dye will result in a quenching of any specific signal, too little will result in no significant reduction of background noise. Essentially, the soluble quenching dye acts like a grey filter specifically for the fluorescent dye label.
According to an aspect of the invention the concentration of said soluble quenching dye is 50% or less of the concentration of said fluorescent dye label. The concentration of said soluble quenching dye can be ½, ⅕, 1/10, 1/20, 1/50, 1/100, 1/200, 1/500, 1/1000, or anywhere between to 1/10.000 or less of the concentration of said fluorescent dye label.
According to an aspect of the invention the amplification reaction is a PCR reaction.
According to an aspect of the invention the fluorescent dye label is an intercalating dye, e.g. ethidium bromide, SYBR Green, etc.
According to an alternative aspect of the invention the fluorescent dye label is bound to a nucleic acid probe capable of specifically binding the test nucleic acid.
The method of the invention can be used both for single labeled probes (fluorophore only) or dual labeled probes (fluorophore and quencher).
According to an aspect of the invention the presence of at least one further test nucleic is determined, wherein said at least one further test nucleic acid is labeled with at least one further fluorescent dye label and wherein said quenching dye has an absorption of at 50% of its maximal absorbance or less (preferably 40%, 30%, 20% or 10% or less) at the excitation wavelength and/or at the emission wave length of said at least one further fluorescent dye label. According to this aspect, a so called multiplex assay is performed, wherein different test nucleic acids are amplified and labeled with different fluorescent dye labels. The quenching dye is conveniently chosen such that the fluorescence of a first fluorescent dye label is dampened (i.e. said soluble quenching dye having an absorption of at least 40% or more at the excitation wavelength and/or at the emission wave length of the fluorescent dye label) while the fluorescence of a second fluorescent dye label is more or less unaffected (said quenching dye has an absorption of at most 40% or less at the excitation wavelength and/or at the emission wave length of said at least one further fluorescent dye label).
According to an alternative aspect of the invention the fluorescent dye label has an excitation wavelength and/or an emission wavelength between 340 and 710 nm, preferably between450 nm and 650 nm. This is the range in which the excitation wavelengths and/or an emission wavelengths of ROX label and other fluorophores commonly used in PCR assays commonly used in PCR assays are found.
According to an alternative aspect of the invention the soluble quenching dye is selected from the group consisting of Methylene Blue, Bromphenol Blue, Tryptan Blue, Methyl Blue, Toluidine Blue, New Methylene Blue, Remazol Blue.
The invention is now described in conjunction with examples and figures which show:
The distinguishing feature of the invention is to decrease the background fluorescence not of an individual probe, but of all probes carrying the same fluorescent label. This is achieved by adding a soluble quenching dye to the qPCR reaction mix. This dye then acts as a “soluble shield” and allows to reduce the fluorescent background brought in by a large number of identically labeled probes. Depending on the nature (i.e. absorption spectrum) of the quenching dye, it is possible to selectively reduce the background of a single detection channel, while maintaining the signal strength of the other detection channels: This provides more flexibility, in case not all channels exhibit the same high background.
The inventive step lies in tackling the high background problem not on the level of individual probes (as described under 2.), but to reduce fluorescent signal of all those probes at once by addition of a reagent, that is inexpensive and normally used for staining.
Furthermore the quenching dye should
The advantage of this approach is a much reduced cost as compared to the current solutions mentioned above. Furthermore, it is possible to adjust the dampening effect of the dye by adjusting its concentration in the reaction mix.
Apart from this invention, other, more obvious possibilities exist to reduce either high assay background or the overall sensitivity of fluorescence detection. However, those solutions would involve the hardware side, e.g. implementation of a light reducing filter or reducing the signal amplification factor of the detection unit, which is expensive and may limit other uses of the detection system. Furthermore, available qPCR instruments are not equipped with such solutions, since they are usually trimmed for maximum sensitivity. Therefore the present invention helps to overcome existing hardware limitations by modification of the assay reaction mix.
The below Table 1 shows some commonly used fluorescent dye labels and excitation and emission wavelengths:
Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)
The Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR), is a means to amplify the amount of DNA or mRNA fragments, e.g. of a specific gene, in a (patient) sample. If mRNA fragments shall be amplified, they first have to be transcribed to cDNA in a reverse transcription (RT) step. In this case, the reaction is called RT-PCR.
The PCR takes place in small reaction tubes in a thermal cycler. The reaction mix consists of
The PCR process is a sequence of ˜20-50 cycles, each of them consisting of the following three steps:
The reaction mix is heated to a temperature of 94-96° C. for 20-30 seconds. In the first cycle, this step can take up to 15 minutes (Initialization). The purpose of these high temperatures is to annihilate the hydrogen bonds between the two strands of the double-stranded DNA.
The temperature is lowered for ca. 30 seconds to a temperature which is specific for the annealing of the primers to the single-stranded DNA (˜50-65° C.). Too high temperatures lead to excessive thermal movement; hence the primers can't bind to the DNA. Temperatures which are too low forward unspecific binding of the primers to sequences of the DNA which are not entirely complementary.
The temperature is increased again to a temperature at which the (Taq) polymerase works best (˜70-80° C.). The polymerase uses the dNTPs to synthesize new DNA strands which are complementary to those strands which are tagged by the primers. It starts at the 3′-end of the primer. If everything works fine, the target DNA in the reaction mix is duplicated in each cycle.
The PCR can also be used to quantify the amount of DNA or mRNA fragments in a sample. In this case, a real-time Polymerase Chain Reaction (qPCR) has to be carried out which relies on the basic PCR.
The procedure, described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,180,349, follows the general principle of polymerase chain reaction; its key feature is that the amplified DNA is detected as the reaction progresses in real time, a new approach compared to standard PCR, where the product of the reaction is detected at its end. Two common methods for detection of products in real-time PCR are: (1) non-specific fluorescent dyes that intercalate with any double-stranded DNA, and (2) sequence-specific DNA probes consisting of oligonucleotides that are labeled with a fluorescent reporter which permits detection only after hybridization of the probe with its complementary DNA target.
In a commonly used variation of the above mentioned second (2) method, also described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,180,349, the probe is labeled by two fluorophors, a reporter and a quencher, and has to be designed in such a way that it binds to the target DNA strands. This binding takes place during the primer annealing phase. If the probe is activated by a specific wave length during this phase, the fluorescence of the reporter is suppressed due to the spatial vicinity of reporter dye and quencher dye as the reporter releases its energy to the quencher. The underlying concept of this energy transfer is called FRET (fluorescence resonance energy transfer). During the elongation phase the polymerase eliminates the probe which is hydrolysed. Thus the distance between reporter dye and quencher dye increases and the reporter begins to fluoresce. The higher the number of templates, the higher the number of redundant reporter molecules, therefore the intensity of the fluorescence is a measure of the initial number of target molecules.
Plotting the fluorescence intensity after each cycle against the cycle number leads to a so-called sigmoid function which consists of three different parts:
The number of target molecules and therefore the fluorescence intensity is very small during the first cycles. The fluorescence appears to be constant in the beginning, because the intensity caused by the amplified template is dominated by the so-called background fluorescence. The background fluorescence might be caused by impurities and degenerated reactants in the well or the optical subsystem of the PCR machine.
During this phase, the fluorescence increases expponentially.
Due to the consumption of available nucleotides and other limitations the synthesis of product slows down at some time. The intensity doesn't increase exponentially any more during the last cycles, but reaches a saturation phase.
In experiments using ROX labeled probes or CAL Fluor Red610 labeled probes, a 0.04%-stock solution of Bromphenol blue (w/v) was used as soluble quenching dye which was diluted 1:10 to 1:200 in experiments (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10166625.3 | Jun 2010 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP11/57506 | 5/10/2011 | WO | 00 | 12/17/2012 |