4.3 Article

Quantification of microRNAs directly from body fluids using a base-stacking isothermal amplification method in a point-of-care device

Journal

BIOMEDICAL MICRODEVICES
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10544-017-0191-2

Keywords

MicroRNA quantification; Isothermal amplification; Point-of-care diagnostics; Direct amplification

Funding

  1. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Superfund Research Program [NIEHS SRP P42ES004911]
  2. twenty-first Century Michigan Economic Development Corporation [GR-476 PO 085P3000517]

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MicroRNAs have been proposed to be a class of biomarkers of disease as expression levels are significantly altered in various tissues and body fluids when compared to healthy controls. As such, the detection and quantification of microRNAs is imperative. While many methods have been established for quantification of microRNAs, they typically rely on time consuming handling such as RNA extraction, purification, or ligation. Here we describe a novel method for quantification of microRNAs using direct amplification in body fluids without upstream sample preparation. Tested with a point-of-care device (termed Gene-Z), the presence of microRNA promotes base-stacking hybridization, and subsequent amplification between two universal strands. The basestacking approach, which was achieved in < 60 min, provided a sensitivity of 1.4 fmol per reaction. Tested in various percentages of whole blood, plasma, and faeces, precision (coefficient of variation = 2.6%) was maintained and comparable to amplification in pristine samples. Overall, the developed method represents a significant step towards rapid, one-step detection of microRNAs.

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