AU2004205118B2 - Method for amplifying nucleic acid sequence - Google Patents

Method for amplifying nucleic acid sequence Download PDF

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Publication number
AU2004205118B2
AU2004205118B2 AU2004205118A AU2004205118A AU2004205118B2 AU 2004205118 B2 AU2004205118 B2 AU 2004205118B2 AU 2004205118 A AU2004205118 A AU 2004205118A AU 2004205118 A AU2004205118 A AU 2004205118A AU 2004205118 B2 AU2004205118 B2 AU 2004205118B2
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Australia
Prior art keywords
primer
dna
nucleic acid
template
reaction
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AU2004205118A1 (en
Inventor
Kiyozo Asada
Michio Hagiya
Ikunoshin Kato
Kazue Miyake
Mariko Moriyama
Hiroyuki Mukai
Yoshimi Sato
Haruhisa Sawaragi
Osamu Takeda
Takashi Uemori
Junko Yamamoto
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Takara Bio Inc
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Takara Bio Inc
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Priority claimed from PCT/JP2000/001534 external-priority patent/WO2000056877A1/en
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12QMEASURING OR TESTING PROCESSES INVOLVING ENZYMES, NUCLEIC ACIDS OR MICROORGANISMS; COMPOSITIONS OR TEST PAPERS THEREFOR; PROCESSES OF PREPARING SUCH COMPOSITIONS; CONDITION-RESPONSIVE CONTROL IN MICROBIOLOGICAL OR ENZYMOLOGICAL PROCESSES
    • C12Q1/00Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions
    • C12Q1/68Measuring or testing processes involving enzymes, nucleic acids or microorganisms; Compositions therefor; Processes of preparing such compositions involving nucleic acids
    • C12Q1/6844Nucleic acid amplification reactions

Description

SAUSTRALIA
Patents Act 1990 COMPLETE SPECIFICATION STANDARD PATENT Applicant(s): TAKARA BIO INC.
Invention Title: METHOD FOR AMPLIFYING NUCLEIC ACID SEQUENCE The following statement is a full description of this invention, including the best method of performing it known to me/us:
DESCRIPTION
METHOD FOR AMPLIFYING NUCLEIC ACID SEQUENCE Technical Field The present invention relates to a method for synthesizing a DNA, which is useful in a field of genetic engineering. It relates to a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence as a template and a method for detecting a nucleic acid amplified by said method.
Background Art DNA synthesis is used for various purposes in studies in a field of genetic engineering. Most of the DNA synthesis with the exception of that of a short-chain
DNA
such as an oligonucleotide is carried out by enzymatic methods in which a DNA polymerase is utilized. An example of the methods is the polymerase chain reaction
(PCR)
method as described in United States Patent Nos. 4,683,195, 4,683,202 and 4,800,159 in detail. Another example is the reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) method, which is a combination of the PCR method and a reverse transcriptase reaction, as described in Trends in Biotechnology, 10:146- 152 (1992). The development of the above-mentioned methods has enabled the amplification of a region of interest from 2 a DNA or an RNA.
The above-mentioned DNA synthesis methods are conducted, for example, using a reaction that consists of three steps. The three steps are a step of dissociating (denaturing) a double-stranded DNA into single-stranded DNAs, a step of annealing a primer to the single-stranded DNA and a step of synthesizing (extending) a complementary strand from the primer in order to amplify a region of a DNA of interest. Alternatively, they are conducted using a reaction designated as "the shuttle PCR" ("PCR ho saizensen" (Recent advances in PCR methodology: Basic methodology and it's application), Tanpakushitsu Kakusan Kouso, Bessatsu, (Protein, Nucleic Acid and Enzyme, Supplement), 41(5):425-428 (1996)) in which two of the three steps, that is, the step of annealing the primer and the step of extending are carried out at the same temperature.
Alternatively, the ligase chain reaction
(LCR)
method as described in EP 320,308 published on June 14, 1989 or the transcription-based amplification system
(TAS)
method as described in PCR Protocols, Academic Press Inc., 1990, pp. 245-252 may be used. The four methods as mentioned above require repeating a reaction at a high temperature and that at a low temperature several times in order to regenerate a single-stranded target molecule for the next amplification cycle. The reaction system should be conducted using discontinuous phases or cycles because the reaction is restricted by temperature as described above.
Thus, the methods require the use of an expensive thermal cycler that can strictly adjust a wide range of temperature over time. Furthermore, the reaction requires time for adjusting the, temperature to the two or three predetermined ones. The loss of time increases in proportion to the cycle number.
Nucleic acid amplification methods that can be carried out isothermally have been developed in order to solve the problems. Examples thereof include the strand displacement amplification (SDA) method as described in Jp- B 7-114718, the self-sustained sequence replication (3SR) method, the nucleic acid sequence based amplification (NASBA) method as described in Japanese Patent No. 2650159, the transcription-mediated amplification (TMA) method, the Q0 replicase method as described in Japanese Patent No.
2710159 and the various modified SDA methods as described in United States Patent No. 5,824,517, WO 99/09211,
WO
95/25180 and WO 99/49081. A method of isothermal enzymatic synthesis of an oligonucleotide is described in United States Patent No. 5,916,777- Extension from a primer and/or annealing of a primer to a single-stranded extension product (or to an original target sequence) followed by extension from the primer take place in parallel in a reaction mixture incubated at a constant temperature in the reaction of these methods of isothermal nucleic acid amplification or synthesis of an oligonucleotide.
Among the isothermal nucleic acid amplification methods, the SDA method is an example of systems in which a DNA is finally amplified. The SDA method is a method for amplifying a target nucleic acid sequence (and a complementary strand thereof) in a sample by displacement of double strands using a DNA polymerase and a restriction endonuclease. The method requires four primers used for the amplification, two of which should be designed to contain a recognition site for the restriction endonuclease.
The method requires the use of a modified deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate as a substrate for DNA synthesis in large quantities. An example of the modified deoxyribonucleotide triphosphates is an (a-S) deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate in which the oxygen atom of the phosphate group at the a-position is replaced by a sulfur atom The problem of running cost associated with the use of the modified deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate becomes serious if the reaction is routinely conducted, for example, for genetic test. Furthermore, the incorporation of the modified nucleotide such as the (a-S) deoxyribonucleotide into the amplified DNA fragment in the method may abolish the cleavability of the amplified
DNA
fragment with a restriction enzyme, for example, when it is subjected to a restriction enzyme fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis.
The modified SDA method as described in United States Patent No. 5,824,517 is a DNA amplification method that uses a chimeric primer that is composed of an RNA and a DNA and has as-an essential element a structure in which DNA is positioned at least at the 3 '-terminus. The modified SDA method as described in WO 99/09211 requires the use of a restriction enzyme that generates a protruding end. The modified SDA method as described in WO 95/25180 requires the use of at least two pairs of primers.
The modified SDA method as described in WO 99/49081 requires the use of at least two pairs of primers and at least one modified deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate. On the other hand, the method for synthesizing an oligonucleotide as described in United States Patent No.
5,916,777 comprises synthesizing a DNA using a primer having a ribonucleotide at the 3 '-terminus, completing a reaction using the primer, introducing a nick between the primer and an extended strand in an primer-extended strand with an endonuclease to separate them, digesting a template and recovering the primer to reuse it. It is required to C isolate the primer from the reaction system and then _anneal it to the template again in order to reuse the o primer in the method.
As described above, the conventional isothermal nucleic acid amplification methods still have various problems. Thus, a method for amplifying a nucleotide 00 sequence at low running cost by which a DNA fragment that can be further genetically engineered is obtained has been Sdesired.
SDescribed herein is a convenient and efficient method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence characterized in that a DNA synthesis reaction is carried out in the presence of an oligonucleotide primer and a method for producing an amplified DNA fragment in large quantities for supplying it.
Summary of Invention As a result of intensive studies, the present inventors have constructed an excellent system for gene amplification reaction. The construction was accomplished by developing a method in which a region of a DNA of interest is amplified in the presence of a chimeric oligonucleotide primer having a ribonucleotide positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side, an endonuclease and a DNA polymerase. The method is designated as the isothermally chimeric primer used amplification of nucleic acid (ICAN) method, which is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence in which a chimeric oligonucleotide primer is used under isothermal conditions.
In one aspect, the present invention provides a composition when used for the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence or for producing a nucleic acid in large quantities, or the method for detecting a target nucleic acid in a sample, characterized in that the method comprises: 7 O preparing a reaction mixture by mixing a nucleic acid as a template, a deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate, a 0 DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity, at least one primer and an endonuclease that cleaves an extended strand generated from the primer, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is
OO
substantially complementary to the base sequence of the nucleic acid as the template and contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on Sthe 3'-terminal side of the primer; and (ii) incubating the reaction mixture for a sufficient time to generate a reaction product, wherein said composition comprises: DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity; an endonuclease; and a buffer for a strand displacement reaction.
In one embodiment, the composition comprises a DNA polymerase selected from the group consisting of Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I from Escherichia coli, Bst DNA polymerase lacking exonuclease from Bacillus stearothermophilus and Bca DNA polymerase lacking exonuclease from Bacillus caldotenax as the DNA polymerase.
In another embodiment, the composition comprises RNase H as the endonuclease.
In another aspect, the present invention provides a method for detecting a mutation of a target nucleic acid, characterized in that the method comprises: preparing a reaction mixture by mixing a nucleic acid as a template, a deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate, a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity, at least one primer for detecting a mutation of a target nucleic acid and an endonuclease that cleaves an extended strand generated from the primer, wherein the primer is a O 8 0 chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is substantially Scomplementary to the base sequence of the nucleic acid as the template and contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ps. ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer; and (ii) incubating the reaction mixture for a sufficient 00 time to generate a reaction product.
Described herein is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence, characterized in that the method comprises: S(a) treating a nucleic acid as a template with at least one primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the template, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer containing a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer for cleavage with an endonuclease; cleaving the primer-extended strand of a doublestranded nucleic acid obtained in step with the endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; and extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step to effect a strand displacement.
Also described herein is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence using at least two primers, characterized in that the method comprises: treating a nucleic acid as a template with at least one primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is NO 8a complementary to the template, wherein the primer is a Schimeric oligonucleotide primer containing a 0 deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer for cleavage with an endonuclease; 00 cleaving the primer-extended strand of a doublestranded nucleic acid obtained in step with the endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; extending a nucleotide sequence that is Scomplementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3 '-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step (b) to effect a strand displacement, wherein a double-stranded nucleic acid containing a regenerated primer-extended strand is reused in step treating a released displaced strand obtained in step as a template with at least one primer that is different from that used in step and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the displaced strand, wherein the primer that is different from that used in step is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the displaced strand and contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3 '-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer for cleavage with an endonuclease; cleaving the primer-extended strand of a double-stranded nucleic acid obtained in step with the endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; and extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the IN- 10 primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in o which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step to effect a strand displacement, wherein a double-stranded nucleic acid containing a regenerated 00 primer-extended strand is reused in step The methods described above may be conducted isothermally. The nucleotide sequence as the template may be a DNA sequence. A step of preparing a single-stranded cDNA by a reverse transcription reaction using reverse transcriptase and an RNA as a template may be comprised prior to step The single-stranded cDNA may be used as the nucleotide sequence as the template. Both of a single-stranded DNA and a double-stranded DNA can be preferably used as the DNA as the template. If a doublestranded DNA is used as the template, the method may be conducted after a pretreatment step of denaturing the double-stranded DNA into single-stranded DNAs.
In the above-mentioned methods, the extension from the primer is conducted using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity. A DNA polymerase selected from the group consisting of Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I from Escherichia coli, Bst DNA polymerase lacking exonuclease from Bacillus stearothermophilus qD 11 and Bca DNA polymerase lacking exonuclease from o Bacillus caldotenax can be preferably used. Additionally, an endoribonuclease can be preferably used as the endonuclease. The endoribonuclease that can be used 00 include, but are not limited to, RNase H, for example.
Also described herein is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence, characterized in that the method comprises: preparing a reaction mixture by mixing a nucleic acid as a template, a deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate, a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity, at least one primer and an endonuclease that cleaves an extended strand generated from the primer, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid as the template and contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer for cleavage with the endonuclease; and incubating the reaction mixture for a sufficient time to generate a reaction product.
Examples of the nucleotide sequences as the templates INO 12 that can be used include a nucleotide sequence selected 0 from the group consisting of a single-stranded DNA, a 0 P- double-stranded DNA denatured into single-stranded DNAs and a cDNA obtained by a reverse transcription reaction 00 from an RNA. Two or more chimeric oligonucleotide primers may be contained in the reaction mixture. The DNA
(N
polymerase having a strand displacement activity and the (N endonuclease can be used.
The primer used in the methods described above is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer. For example, a chimeric oligonucleotide having a structure in which at least one, preferably two or more successive ribonucleotide residues are attached at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer can be used.
The template used in the methods described above may be a nucleic acid that is amplified beforehand by a nucleic acid amplification method. For example, the TAS method, the 3SR method, the NASBA method, the TMA method, the QP replicase method, the PCR method, the LCR method and the SDA method can be utilised as the nucleic acid amplification method although any methods for amplifying a nucleic acid can be used without limitation. The method described herein can be used in combination with these NO- 13 nucleic acid amplification methods.
C)
0 r" A random primer or a degenerate primer can be used in the nucleic acid amplification reaction. For example, 00 without limitation, a primer having a random sequence or a Sdegenerate sequence at least at the 3'-terminus or on the
(N
3'-terminal side can be preferably used.
Also described herein is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that can be used for the methods described above.
The primer is characterized in that it contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide and has a structure in which the ribonucleotide is positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer. For example, a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that contains at least one, preferably two or more successive ribonucleotide residues and enables the extension of a DNA strand from the 3'-terminus thereof may be used. Such a primer is designed such that it is cleaved by the action of a ribonuclease such as RNase H at the 3'-terminus of the ribonucleotide residue.
Also described herein is a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity, an endonuclease, and a kit that contains them.
qD 14 OAlso described herein is a method for detecting a 0 target nucleic acid, characterized in that the method comprises amplifying a target nucleic acid by the method 00 S 5 for amplifying a nucleotide sequence and then detecting the nucleic acid. The methods of detection include a method in which the target nucleic acid is detected using (Ni a ribonucleotide (RNA) probe labeled with two or more fluorescent dyes positioned at a distance that results in a quenching state.
Also described herein is a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity, an endonuclease and a kit that contains them used for the method for detecting a target nucleic acid.
Also described herein is a method for producing a material having an immobilized nucleic acid in which the nucleic acid is arrayed in a predefined region, characterized in that the method comprises arraying and immobilizing the nucleic acid amplified by the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence in a predefined region on a substrate. A method in which a single-stranded nucleic acid substantially free of a complementary strand thereto is amplified, and arrayed and immobilized in the S- s15 predefined region is particularly preferable.
0 Also described herein is a material having an 0 immobilized nucleic acid in which the nucleic acid is arrayed in a predefined region produced by the method 00 described above. A material having an immobilized nucleic acid in which a single-stranded nucleic acid substantially t free of a complementary strand thereto is arrayed and C immobilized in the predefined region is particularly preferable.
Also described herein is a method for detecting a target nucleic acid in a sample, characterized in that the method uses the material having an immobilized nucleic acid in which the nucleic acid is arrayed in a predefined region to detect a nucleic acid that hybridizes with the nucleic acid arrayed and immobilized in the predefined region on the material.
Also described herein is a method for producing a nucleic acid in large quantities, characterized in that the method comprises: treating a nucleic acid as a template with at least one primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the template, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer containing a qN 16 deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on l^ the 3'-terminal side of the primer for cleavage with an endonuclease; 00 5 cleaving the primer-extended strand of a double- Sstranded nucleic acid obtained in step with the endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; and extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step to effect a strand displacement.
Also described herein is a method for producing a nucleic acid in large quantities using at least two primers, characterized in that the method comprises: treating a nucleic acid as a template with at least one primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the template, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer containing a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer for cleavage with an endonuclease; cleaving the primer-extended strand of a double-stranded nucleic acid obtained in step with the endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step (b) to effect a strand displacement, wherein a double-stranded nucleic acid containing a regenerated primer-extended strand is reused in step treating a released displaced strand obtained in step as a template with at least one primer that is different from that used in step and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the displaced strand, wherein the primer that is different from that used in step is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the displaced strand and S- 18 Scontains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the o ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on 1^ the 3'-terminal side of the primer for cleavage with an 00 endonuclease; cleaving the primer-extended strand of a doublestranded nucleic acid obtained in step with the endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; and extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step to effect a strand displacement, wherein a double-stranded nucleic acid containing a regenerated primer-extended strand is reused in step Also described herein is a method for producing a nucleic acid in large quantities, characterized in that the method comprises: preparing a reaction mixture by mixing a nucleic acid as a template, a deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate, a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity, at least one primer and an endonuclease that cleaves an N 19 extended strand generated from the primer, wherein the o primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is r- substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid as the template and contains a 00 deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the Sribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on
(N
the 3'-terminal side of the primer for cleavage with the c endonuclease; and incubating the reaction mixture for a sufficient time to generate a reaction product.
Also described herein is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence, characterized in that the method comprises: amplifying a nucleic acid containing a sequence to be amplified by a nucleic acid amplification reaction to prepare a nucleic acid as a template; treating the nucleic acid as the template obtained in step with at least one primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the template, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer containing a deoxyribonucleotide and a ND 20 C ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the O 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer for 0 cleavage with an endonuclease; 0O cleaving the primer-extended strand of a doublestranded nucleic acid obtained in step with the C-q endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; and extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step to effect a strand displacement.
Also described herein is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence using at least two primers, characterized in that the method comprises: amplifying a nucleic acid containing a sequence to be amplified by a nucleic acid amplification reaction to prepare a nucleic acid as a template; treating the nucleic acid as the template obtained in step with at least one primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the template, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer containing a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer for cleavage with an endonuclease; cleaving the primer-extended strand of a double-stranded nucleic acid obtained in step with the endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step (c) to effect a strand displacement, wherein a double-stranded nucleic acid containing a regenerated primer-extended strand is reused in step treating a released displaced strand obtained in step as a template with at least one primer that is different from that used in step and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the displaced strand, wherein the primer that is different from that used in step is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the displaced strand and contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer for cleavage with an endonuclease; cleaving the primer-extended strand of a INO 22 double-stranded nucleic acid obtained in step with the 0 endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; and 00 extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step to effect a strand displacement, wherein a double-stranded nucleic acid containing a regenerated primer-extended strand is reused in step Also described herein is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence, characterized in that the method comprises: amplifying a nucleic acid containing a sequence to be amplified by a nucleic acid amplification reaction to prepare a nucleic acid as a template; preparing a reaction mixture by mixing the nucleic as the template obtained in step a deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate, a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity, at least one primer and an endonuclease that cleaves an extended strand generated from the primer, wherein the primer is a chimeric N 23 oligonucleotide primer that is substantially complementary o to the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid as the template and contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 00 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer for 0 cleavage with the endonuclease; and
(N
S(c) incubating the reaction mixture for a sufficient time to generate a reaction product.
In the methods described above, a nucleic acid containing a sequence to be amplified is amplified beforehand by a nucleic acid amplification reaction. The amplification product is then used as a nucleic acid as a template. For example, the TAS method, the 3SR method, the NASBA method, the TMA method, the QP replicase method, the PCR method, the LCR method and the SDA method can be used as the nucleic acid amplification method described above although any methods for amplifying a nucleic acid can be used without limitation.
A random primer or a degenerate primer can be used in the nucleic acid amplification reaction. For example, without limitation, a primer having a random sequence or a degenerate sequence at least at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side can be preferably used.
NO
0 24 CI Also described herein is a method for amplifying a O nucleotide sequence, characterized in that the method 0 comprises: treating a nucleic acid as a template with at 00 5 least one primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid and a DNA Spolymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the template, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer containing a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer; cleaving the primer-extended strand of a doublestranded nucleic acid obtained in step with an endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; and extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step to effect a strand displacement.
Also described herein is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence using at least two primers, characterized in that the method comprises: treating a nucleic acid as a template with at least one primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the template, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer containing a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3 '-terminus or on the 3 '-terminal side of the primer; cleaving the primer-extended strand of a double-stranded nucleic acid obtained in step with an endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3 '-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step (b) to effect a strand displacement, wherein a double-stranded nucleic acid containing a regenerated primer-extended strand is reused in step treating a released displaced strand obtained in step as a template with at least one primer that is different from that used in step and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the displaced strand, wherein the primer that is different from that used in step is a chimeric 0- 26 Soligonucleotide primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the displaced strand and contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the 00 ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on i3 5 the 3'-terminal side of the primer; cleaving the primer-extended strand of a doublestranded nucleic acid obtained in step with an endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; and extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step to effect a strand displacement, wherein a double-stranded nucleic acid containing a regenerated primer-extended strand is reused in step Also described herein is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence, characterized in that the method comprises: preparing a reaction mixture by mixing a nucleic acid as a template, a deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate, a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity, at
NO
27 least one primer and an endonuclease that cleaves an o extended strand generated from the primer, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of 00 5 the nucleic acid as the template and contains a Sdeoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the Sribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer; and incubating the reaction mixture for a sufficient time to generate a reaction product.
Also described herein is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence, characterized in that the method comprises: treating a nucleic acid as a template with at least one primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the template, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer containing a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer, wherein an endonuclease cleaves at a site that contains the ribonucleotide;
NO
0 28 CI cleaving the primer-extended strand of a double- 0 strand nucleic acid obtained in step with the endonuclease at the site that contains the ribonucleotide; and 00 5 extending a nucleotide sequence that is e- complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase Shaving a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid Sin which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step to effect a strand displacement.
Also described herein is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence using at least two primers, characterized in that the method comprises: treating a nucleic acid as a template with at least one primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the template, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer containing a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer, wherein an endonuclease cleaves at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; cleaving the primer-extended strand of a doublestranded nucleic acid obtained in step with the endonuclease at the site that contains the ribonucleotide; extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step (b) to effect a strand displacement, wherein a double-stranded nucleic acid containing a regenerated primer-extended strand is'reused in step treating a released displaced strand obtained in step as a template with at least one primer that is different from that used in step and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the displaced strand, wherein the primer that is different from that used in step is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the displaced strand and contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer, wherein an endonuclease cleaves at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; cleaving the primer-extended strand. of a double-stranded nucleic acid obtained in step with the endonuclease at the site that contains the ribonucleotide; and extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3',-terminus of the 30 Sprimer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in o which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step to effect a strand displacement, wherein a double-stranded nucleic acid containing a regenerated 00 5 primer-extended strand is reused in step Also described herein is a method for amplifying a (1 nucleotide sequence, characterized in that the method comprises: preparing a reaction mixture by mixing a nucleic acid as a template, a deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate, a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity, at least one primer and an endonuclease that cleaves .an extended strand generated from the primer, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is substantially complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid as the template and contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer, wherein the endonuclease cleaves at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; and incubating the reaction mixture for a sufficient time to generate a reaction product.
Also described herein is a method for determining a nucleotide sequence of a nucleic acid, characterized in that the method comprises amplifying a nucleotide sequence according to the methods described above.
0- 31 eC Brief Description of Drawings 0 0 Figure 1 is a flow chart that illustrates an example of the method of the present invention in which a singlestranded DNA is used. In the figure, the released DNA 5 strand marked with the closed circle serves as a template DNA in Figure 2 shows the results of agarose gel electrophoresis of DNA fragments amplified by the method of the present invention using varying reaction time.
Detailed Description of the Invention As used herein, a deoxyribonucleotide (also referred to as a dN) refers to a nucleotide of which the sugar portion is composed of D-2-deoxyribose. The deoxyribonucleotides include, for example, ones having adenine, cytosine, guanine or thymine as the base portion.
As used herein, a ribonucleotide (also referred to as an N) refers to a nucleotide of which the sugar portion is composed of D-ribose. The ribonucleotides include ones having adenine, cytosine, guanine or uracil as the base portion. The ribonucleotides also include modified ribonucleotides such as a modified ribonucleotide in which the oxygen atom of the phosphate group at the a-position is replaced by a sulfur atom (also referred to as an (a-S) ribonucleotide or an N) or other derivatives.
As used herein, a chimeric oligonucleotide primer refers to a primer that contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide. The primer may contain an unmodified deoxyribonucleotide and/or a modified deoxyribonucleotide.
Alternatively, it may contain an unmodified ribonucleotide and/or a modified ribonucleotide.
The chimeric oligonucleotide primers used in the present invention include any chimeric oligonucleotide primer that has a ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer, can be used to extend a nucleic acid strand in the method of the present invention, can be cleaved with an endonuclease, and can be used to effect a strand displacement reaction.
As used herein, a 3'-terminal side refers to a portion from the center to the 3 '-terminus of a nucleic acid such as a primer. Likewise, the 5'-terminal side refers to a portion from the center to the 5'-terminus of a nucleic acid.
As used herein, an endonuclease may be any one that acts on a double-stranded DNA generated by extending a DNA from the chimeric oligonucleotide primer which have been annealed to a nucleic acid as a template, and specifically cleaves it at a portion of the primer that contains a ribonucleotide.
As used herein, a DNA polymerase refers to an enzyme that synthesizes a. DNA strand de novo using a DNA strand as a template. The DNA polymerases include, but are not limited to, pol I-type DNA polymerases Escherichia coli DNA polymerase I, Klenow fragment and Taq DNA polymerase), a-type DNA polymerases a DNA polymerase from Pyrococcus furiosus (Stratagene), VENT DNA polymerase (New England Biolabs), KOD DNA polymerase (Toyobo) and DEEP VENT DNA polymerase (New England Biolabs)) and non-a-, non-pol I-type DNA polymerases a DNA polymerase as described in WO 97/24444). DNA polymerases having a strand displacement activity include DNA polymerases from thermophilic bacteria of genus Bacillus such as Bacillus caldotenax (hereinafter referred to as B. ca) and Bacillus stearothermophilus (hereinafter referred to as B. st) as well as variants of these DNA polymerases lacking their exonuclease activities.
Furthermore, the DNA polymerases of strand displacement type include DNA polymerases, Klenow fragment, that have a strand displacement activity and do not have a exonuclease activity. In addition, the DNA polymerase may be a mixture of plural DNA polymerases such as., without limitation, a mixture of a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity and a DNA polymerase that does not have a strand displacement activity.
As used herein, "a strand displacement activity" refers to an activity that can effect a strand displacement, that is, that can proceed DNA duplication on the basis of the nucleotide sequence as the template while displacing the DNA strand to release the complementary strand that has been annealed to the template strand. In addition, a DNA strand released from a nucleotide sequence as a template as a result of a strand displacement is referred to as "a displaced strand" herein.
Hereinafter, the present invention will be described in detail.
Chimeric oligonucleotide primer used in the present invention.
The primer used in the method of the present invention is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide. Such primers include an oligoribonucleotide primer that contains an unmodified ribonucleotide and/or a modified ribonucleotide.
A chimeric oligonucleotide primer used in the method of the present invention may be any chimeric oligonucleotide primer that has a nucleotide sequence substantially complementary to a part of the nucleotide sequence of a nucleic acid as a template, that can be used to extend a DNA strand from its 3'-terminus, and that has a site at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side at which an endonuclease cleaves during a DNA synthesis reaction.
For example, a chimeric oligonucleotide primer having a ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side can be used. The primer is usually designed such that it is complementary to a portion upstream of the region to be amplified, that is, a portion 3' to the nucleotide sequence corresponding to a region to be amplified in a nucleic acid as a template. As used herein, "a substantially complementary nucleotide sequence" means a nucleotide sequence that can anneal to a DNA as a template under reaction conditions used. Such a chimeric oligonucleotide primer or an oligonucleotide primer can be designed by those skilled in the art according to known procedures, for example, with reference to Labo Manual PCR (Takara Shuzo, pp. 13-16, 1996). A commercially available software for designing a primer such as OLIGOTM Primer Analysis software (Takara Shuzo) can be used.
The chimeric oligonucleotide primer used in the method of the present invention may contain one or more modified ribonucleotide. As used herein, a ribonucleotide may be either an unmodified ribonucleotide or a modified ribonucleotide that can be positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal, side of a chimeric oligonucleotide primer and that is recognized by or cleaved with an endonuclease. The ribonucleotides include both of the unmodified ribonucleotide and the modified ribonucleotide as described above. An unmodified ribonucleotide, a modified ribonucleotide or a combination thereof can be used for the chimeric oligonucleotide primer of the present invention as long as it does not abolish the function of the primer. Examples of the modified ribonucleotides include, but are not limited to, an ribonucleotide in which the oxygen atom bound to the phosphate group is replaced by a sulfur atom, and a ribonucleotide in which the hydroxy group at the 2-position of the ribose is replaced by a methoxy group. Such a chimeric oligonucleotide primer containing a modified ribonucleotide can be produced by using, for example, an (a-S) ribonucleotide triphosphate, which is prepared by a method as described in United States Patent No. 5,003,097 using a sulfuration reaction reagent (Glen Research), or a 2-OMe- RNA-CE phosphoramidite reagent (Glen Research).
A chimeric oligonucleotide primer that can be used in the amplification method of the present invention may be designed to contain a modified ribonucleotide that confers resistance to the cleavage with an endonuclease.
Such a primer is useful in that one can control the cleavage site. with an endonuclease during amplification reaction steps.
One or two chimeric oligonucleotide primer may be used in the method of the present invention depending on the desired form of a DNA fragment after amplification (single-stranded or double-stranded). Specifically, one chimeric oligonucleotide primer is used when a singlestranded DNA is desired, whereas two primers are used when a double-stranded DNA is desired.
The length of the chimeric oligonucleotide primer used in the method of the present invention is not specifically limited, but is preferably about 12 nucleotides to about 100 nucleotides, more preferably about nucleotides to about 40 nucleotides. It is preferable that the nucleotide sequence of the chimeric oligonucleotide is substantially complementary to a nucleic acid as a template such that it anneals to the nucleic acid as the template under reaction conditions used. The primer contains a sequence recognized by an endonuclease, which is utilized in a step as described below, at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side.
For example, an oligonucleotide having a structure represented by the following general formula can be used in the DNA synthesis method of the present invention as a primer, although it is not intended to limit the present invention: General formula: 5'-dNa-Nb-dN=3' an integer of 11 or more; b: 0 or an integer of 1 or more; c: 0 or an integer of 1 or more, provided that b and c are not simultaneously 0; dN: deoxyribonucleotide;
N:
unmodified ribonucleotide and/or modified ribonucleotide).
For example, a chimeric oligonucleotide primer represented by the general formula in which a an integer of 11 or more; and b 1 and c b 2 and c 0, b and c 0, or b 2 and c 0-5 can be preferably used in the present invention. The length of the ribonucleotides at the 3 '-terminus or on the 3 '-termunal side of the chimeric oligonucleotide primer used in the method of the present invention is preferably 1-mer to 15-mer, more preferably 1-mer to 10-mer, most preferably 1-mer to The number of c in the general formula is not specifically limited, but any number that can be used in the method of the present invention may be selected. Usually, 5 or less is preferably. Better results are obtained in a reaction by selecting 3 rather than 4, 2 rather than 3, and 1 rather than 2 for c. In particular, the most efficient reaction can be accomplished in case of c 0.
The chimeric oligonucleotide primer used in the present invention has a structure in which an endonuclease cleaves a DNA strand extended from the primer using a DNA polymerase (a primer-extended strand) at a site that contains a ribonucleotide. In other words, a ribonucleotide is positioned at the 3 '-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the chimeric oligonucleotide primer for cleavage with an endonuclease. For example, when RNase H acts on a double-stranded DNA generated by extending a DNA from a chimeric oligonucleotide primer represented by the general formula that has been annealed to a nucleic acid as a template, the chimeric oligonucleotide primer is cleaved at the ribonucleotide portion. A double-stranded DNA in which a nick is introduced between the oligonucleotide primer and a DNA strand synthesized by the extension is then generated. Then, a strand displacement reaction with a DNA polymerase proceeds from the nicked site. Thus, any chimeric oligonucleotide primer that can be used to extend a nucleic acid strand from the 3 '-terminus of the primer, that can be cleaved with an endonuclease, and with which a DNA polymerase can effect a strand displacement reaction can be used in the method of the present invention.
The chimeric oligonucleotide primer can be synthesized to have any nucleotide sequence using, for example, the 394 type DNA synthesizer from Applied Biosystems Inc. (ABI) according to a phosphoramidite method.
Alternatively, any methods including a phosphate triester method, an H-phosphonate method and a thiophosphonate method may be used to synthesize the chimeric oligonucleotide primer.
Endonuclease used in the present invention.
Any endonuclease that acts on a double-stranded DNA generated by DNA extension from the chimeric oligonucleotide primer as described above in that has been annealed to a nucleic acid as a template and cleaves the extended strand to effect a strand displacement reaction can be used in the present invention. That is, the endonuclease is an enzyme that generates a nick in the chimeric oligonucleotide primer portion of the doublestranded DNA. Examples of endonucleases that can be used in the present invention include, but are not limited to, ribonucleases. Among these, endoribonuclease H (RNase
H)
that acts on an RNA portion of a double-stranded nucleic acid composed of a DNA and an RNA can be preferably used.
Any ribonuclease that has the above-mentioned activities can be preferably used in the present invention, including mesophilic and heat-resistant ones. For example, RNase
H
from E. coli can be used for a reaction at about 50'C to about 70°C in the method of the present invention as described below in Examples. A commercially available heat-resistant ribonuclease, HybridaseTM Thermostable RNase H (Epicenter Technologies) can also be preferably used.
Furthermore, the ribonuclease may be a naturally occurring one or a variant. The enzymatic unit of RNase H indicated herein is a value expressed .according to a method of measuring an enzymatic unit as described in Referential Examples.
The efficiency of the cleavage reaction with an endonuclease such as RNase H used in the method of the present invention may depend on the nucleotide sequence around the 3 '-terminus of the primer and influence the amplification efficiency of the desired DNA. Therefore, it is natural to design the optimal primer for the RNase H used.
As used herein, the term "introducing a nick" or "nicking" means internally cleaving one of the two strands of a double-stranded nucleic acid. For example, RNase
H
acts on a hybrid double-stranded nucleic acid composed of a DNA and a ribonucleotide-containing DNA to selectively cleave the ribonucleotide-containing strand among the two strands at the ribonucleotide portion, thereby introducing a nick into the hybrid double-stranded nucleic acid.
DNA polymerase used in the present invention.
A DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity on a DNA can be used in the present invention.
Particularly, a DNA polymerase substantially lacking a lacking exonuclease activity can be preferably used.
As used herein, "a strand displacement activity" refers to an activity that can effect a strand displacement, that is, that can proceed DNA duplication on the basis of a nucleotide sequence as a template while displacing a DNA strand to release a complementary strand that has been annealed to the template strand. Additionally, a DNA strand released from a nucleotide sequence as a template as a result of a strand displacement is referred to as "a displaced strand" herein.
Any DNA polymerases having the strand displacement activity can be used in the present invention.
Examples thereof include variants of DNA polymerases lacking their exonuclease activities derived from thermophilic bacteria of genus Bacillus such as Bacillus caldotenax (hereinafter referred to as B. ca) and Bacillus stearothermophilus (hereinafter referred to as B. st), as well as large fragment (Klenow fragment) of DNA polymerase I from Escherichia coli coli). Both of mesophilic and heat-resistant DNA polymerases can be preferably used in the present invention.
B. ca is a thermophilic bacterium having an optimal growth temperature of about 70°C. Bca DNA polymerase from this bacterium is known to have a DNAdependent DNA polymerase activity, an RNA-dependent
DNA
polymerase activity (a reverse transcription activity), a exonuclease activity and a exonuclease activity.
The enzyme may be either an enzyme purified from its original source or a recombinant protein produced by using genetic engineering techniques. The enzyme may be subjected to modification such as substitution, deletion, addition or insertion by using genetic engineering techniques or other means. Examples of modified enzymes include Bca BEST DNA polymerase (Takara Shuzo), which is Bca DNA polymerase lacking its exonuclease activity.
Composition of the reaction buffer used in the present invention.
A reaction buffer that contains a buffering component, a magnesium salt and dNTPs is used in the present invention. Examples of the buffering components that can be preferably used include, but are not limited to, Tricine, tris-hydrochloride and a phosphate (such as sodium phosphate and potassium phosphate). Among these, a buffer that contains Tricine or a phosphate as a buffering component is preferable for the present invention. The final concentration of the buffering component ranges 5-100 mM, preferably 20-50 mM. The pH ranges 6.0-9.5, preferably 7.0-9.2. For example, a buffer containing 22-46 mM Tricine at pH 7.5-9.2 or a buffer containing 25-50 mM potassium phosphate at pH 7.0-8.0 is preferably used. Examples of magnesium salts that can be preferably used include, but .are not limited to, magnesium chloride, magnesium acetate or magnesium sulfate. The final concentration of the magnesium salt ranges 1-20 mM, preferably 2-10 mM. The final concentrations of dNTPs (dATP, dCTP, dGTP and dTTP) in a mixture as substrates for a DNA extension reaction range 0.1-3.0 mM, preferably 0.2-1.2 mM. The amount of the primers used in a reaction volume of 50 pl ranges 1-1000 pmol, preferably 10-100 pmol. Additionally, the reaction mixture may contain an additive in order to stabilize the amplification reaction, for example. BSA at a final concentration of 0.1% or less, dimethylsulfoxide at a final concentration of 10% or less, putrescine dihydrochloride at a final concentration of 4 mM or less, or propylenediamine at a concentration of 0.01% or less may be added.
Alternatively, NMP (l-methyl-2-pyrrolidinone), glycerol, poly(ethylene glycol), dimethylsulfoxide and/or formamide may be contained. It is expected that the addition of such an organic solvent reduces the non-specific annealing of oligonucleotide primers.
The amount of RNase H from E. coli as an example of endonucleases in a reaction volume of 50 pl ranges preferably 3-200 U, more preferably 15-60 U. The amount of Bca BEST DNA polymerase as an example of DNA polymerases in a reaction volume of 50 pl ranges preferably 0.5-100 U, more preferably 1-22 U. The preferable number of units of the endonuclease, among these, may presumably vary depending on the type thereof. In such case, the composition of the buffer and the amount of the enzyme to be added are adjusted such that the amount of amplification product becomes the maximum. In any case, it is natural to optimize the composition of the reaction buffer and the like depending on the type of the enzyme used.
Method for amplifying nucleotide sequence of the present invention.
The method of the present invention can be conducted by using at least one oligonucleotide primer as described above in in combination with the endonuclease as described above in and the DNA polymerase. as described above in dNTPs used for the PCR method or the like (a mixture of dATP, dCTP, dGTP and dTTP) can be preferably used as the nucleotide triphosphates as substrates in an extension reaction in the method. The dNTPs may contain a dNTP analog such as 7-deaza-dGTP as long as it serves as a substrate for the DNA polymerase used. A chimeric oligonucleotide primer is used in the method. The primer can be prepared, for example, using a DNA synthesizer according to a conventional synthesis method. A combination of the chimeric oligonucleotide primer and a normal oligonucleotide primer can be used in the method of the present invention.
The nucleic acid (DNA or RNA) used as a template in the method of the present invention may be prepared or isolated from any sample that may contain a nucleic acid.
Examples of the samples that may contain the nucleic acid include, but are not limited to, samples from organisms such 'as a whole blood, a serum, a buffy coat, a urine, feces, a cerebrospinal fluid, a seminal fluid, a saliva, a tissue a cancerous tissue or a lymph node) and a cell culture a mammalian cell culture or a bacterial cell culture), samples that contain a nucleic acid such as a viroid, a virus, a bacterium, a fungi, a yeast, a plant and an animal, samples suspected to be contaminated 'or infected with a microorganism such as a virus or a bacterium a food or a biological formulation), and samples that may contain an organism such as a soil and a waste water. The sample may be a preparation containing a nucleic acid obtained by processing the samples as described above according to a known method. Examples of the preparations that can be used in the present invention include a cell destruction product or a sample obtained by fractionating the product, the nucleic acid in the sample, or specific nucleic acid molecules such as a sample in which mRNAs are enriched. Furthermore, a nucleic acid such as a DNA or an RNA obtained amplifying a nucleic acid contained in the sample by a known method can be preferably used.
The preparation containing a nucleic acid can be prepared from the above-mentioned materials by using, for example, lysis with a detergent, sonication, shaking/stirring using glass beads or a French press without limitation. In some cases, it is advantageous to further process the preparation to purify the nucleic acid in case where an endogenous nuclease exists). In such cases, the nucleic acid is purified by a know method such as phenol extraction, chromatography, ion exchange, gel electrophoresis or density-gradient centrifugation.
When it is desired to amplify a nucleic acid having a sequence derived from an RNA, the method of the present invention may be conducted using as a template a cDNA synthesized by a reverse transcription reaction that uses the RNA as a template. Any RNA for which one can make a primer for a reverse transcription reaction can be applied to the method of the present invention, including RNA molecules such as total RNA, mRNA, tRNA and rRNA in a sample as well as specific RNA species.
Any primer that anneals to an RNA as a template under reaction conditions used can be used in the reverse transcription reaction. The primer may be a primer having a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to a specific RNA as a template (a specific primer), an oligo-dT (deoxythymine) primer and a primer having a random sequence (a random primer). In view of specific annealing, the length of the primer for reverse transcription is preferably 6 nucleotides or more, more preferably 9 nucleotides or more. In view of oligonucleotide synthesis, the length is preferably 100 nucleotides or less, more preferably 30 nucleotides or less.
Additionally, a chimeric oligonucleotide primer can be used as a primer for reverse transcription. The chimeric oligonucleotide primer can also be utilized as a primer for a strand displacement reaction in the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention using a cDNA obtained after reverse transcription as a template. Such primer may be any one that has the properties as described above in and that can be used in a reverse transcription reaction from an RNA.
Any enzyme that has an activity of synthesizing a cDNA using an RNA as a template can be used in the reverse transcription reaction. Examples thereof include reverse transcriptases originating from various sources such as avian myeloblostosis virus-derived reverse transcriptase (AMV RTase), Molony murine leukemia virus-derived reverse transcriptase (MMLV RTase) and Rous-associated virus 2 reverse transcriptase (RAV-2 RTase). In addition, a DNA polymerase that also has a reverse transcription activity can be used. An enzyme having a reverse transcription activity at a high temperature such as a DNA polymerase from a bacterium of genus Thermus Tth DNA polymerase) and a DNA polymerase -from a thermophilic bacterium of genus Bacillus is preferable for the present invention. For example, DNA polymerases from thermophilic bacteria of genus Bacillus such as a DNA polymerase from B.
st (Bst DNA polymerase) and a DNA polymerase from B. ca (Bca DNA polymerase) are preferable, although it is not intended to limit the present invention. For example, Bca DNA. polymerase does not require a manganese ion for the reverse transcription reaction. Furthermore, it can synthesize a cDNA while suppressing the formation of a secondary structure of an RNA as a template under hightemperature conditions. Both a naturally occurring one and a variant of the enzyme having a reverse transcriptase activity can be used as long as they have the activity.
In the amplification of a nucleic acid by the method of the present invention, a nucleic acid of interest may be amplified more efficiently by amplifying the nucleic acid as a template beforehand. For example, when a nucleotide sequence present in a trace amount of a genomic DNA is amplified, a DNA fragment containing the nucleotide sequence of interest is first amplified by an appropriate nucleic acid amplification method. The thus obtained amplified DNA fragment is then used as a template to conduct the amplification method of the present invention.
The first amplification step may be conducted by the method of the present invention. Alternatively, it may be conducted by a known nucleic acid amplification method such as the PCR method. Furthermore, a specific nucleotide sequence may be added on the 5'-terminal side of the primer to be used in the amplification step. When a fragment amplified using such a primer is used as a template, the amplification method of the present invention can be conducted using a chimeric oligonucleotide primer having the specific nucleotide sequence added to the abovementioned primer. In other words, it is possible to conduct the nucleic acid amplification step in the method of the present invention, in which a DNA fragment amplified by the PCR is used as a template, by using a common chimeric oligonucleotide prime regardless of the nucleotide sequence of the region to be amplified.. This is accomplished by combining the method of the present invention and the PCR using a primer having a specific nucleotide sequence added on the 5'-terminal side as described above.
Usually, one should produce a pair of primers specific to a nucleotide sequence of interest in order to amplify the sequence in the first nucleic acid amplification step specifically. However, a nucleic acid as a template can be amplified .without the use of a primer specific to the nucleotide sequence of interest by utilizing a random primer, which non-specifically amplifies nucleic acid fragments, or a pair of primers selected from a set of ready-made degenerate primers. The number of primer pairs required to amplify plural nucleic acids as templates can be decreased. The decrease is accomplished by utilizing, for example, the PCR method that uses a random primer having a tag sequence (Nucleic Acids Research, 24(19):3778-3783 (1996)) or the degenerate oligonucleotideprimed PCR method (DOP-PCR; Genomics, 13:718-725 (1992), which uses a degenerate primer having a tag sequence. Each of such primers has a random sequence or a degenerate sequence at the 3'-terminus. If the amplification method of the present invention is conducted using a nucleic acid amplified with a primer having a tag sequence as a template, the method of the present invention can be conducted by using one chimeric oligonucleotide primer. Such chimeric oligonucleotide primer has the nucleotide sequence identical with that of the tag sequence. By using such a primer, all of the nucleic acids that have been amplified using a primer having the same tag sequence are used as templates. Thus, a variety of nucleotide sequences can be supplied at very low cost and in large quantities by combining the method of the present invention with a nucleic acid amplification method that uses a random primer or a degenerate primer.
Any DNA polymerase that synthesizes a DNA strand de novo using a DNA strand as a template can be used in the nucleic acid amplification method. Such DNA polymerases include pol I-type DNA polymerases E. coli DNA polymerase I, Klenow fragment and Taq DNA polymerase), ctype DNA polymerases a DNA polymerase from Pyrococcus furiosus, VENT DNA polymerase, KOD DNA polymerase and DEEP VENT DNA polymerase) and non-a-, nonpol I-type DNA polymerases a DNA polymerase as described in WO 97/24444). In addition, a mixture of at least two DNA polymerases such as TaKaRa Ex Taq DNA polymerase (Takara Shuzo) or KOD dash DNA polymerase (Toyobo) can be preferably used. Furthermore, DNA polymerases such as a DNA polymerase from B. ca, a DNA polymerase from B. st, variants of these DNA polymerases lacking their exonuclease activities, 9 0 N DNA polymerase, Pfu (exo-) DNA polymerase (Stratagene), Tth DNA polymerase (Toyobo) and Tfl DNA polymerase (Promega) can be preferably used.
If a linear DNA fragment a PCR-amplified fragment) is used in the amplification method of the present invention as a template, introduction of a sequence designated as a spacer portion may increase the amplification efficiency. The spacer portion is located between the 3 '-terminus of the linear DNA fragment as the template and the annealing site at the 5'-terminus of the primer used for the method of the present invention. For example, it is preferable to design the primer for the amplification method of the present invention such that the length of the spacer portion is, without limitation, 1 to about 70 bases, more preferably about 5 to about 60 bases.
The preferable number of bases of the spacer portion may vary depending on the sequence of the primer for the amplification method of the present invention. The optimal spacer portion can be determined with reference to the disclosure in Examples herein. A fragment amplified beforehand, for example, by PCR such that the spacer portion is added 3' to the annealing region of the amplification primer of the present invention can be used as a template in the amplification method of the present invention. In one embodiment, a nucleic acid as a template is amplified beforehand by using a primer. Such primer has, in direction, a region of the spacer portion, a region of the amplification primer of the present invention, and a region of another primer for amplifying a nucleic acid. The thus amplified fragment can be then used as a template in the amplification method of the present invention. The region of another primer for amplifying a nucleic acid may be any region of a primer for a nucleic acid amplification method such as the PCR method.
Alternatively, the region of another primer for amplifying a nucleic acid may be a region of another amplification primer of the present invention.
Both of a double-stranded DNA such as an isolated genomic DNA or a PCR fragment and a single-stranded
DNA
such as a cDNA prepared by a reverse transcription reaction from a total RNA or an mRNA can be preferably used as a template DNA in the present invention. The double-stranded DNA is preferably used after denaturing it into singlestranded DNAs.
The denaturing step may be eliminated in the amplification method of the present invention if a linear double-stranded DNA such as a PCR amplification product is used as a template. The elimination may be accomplished by locating the annealing site for the primer of the present invention about 50 bases inside from the terminus of the DNA. If a nucleic acid having a sequence from an RNA is to be amplified, a reverse transcription reaction using an RNA as a template and a DNA amplification reaction using a cDNA generated by the reverse transcription reaction as a template can be conducted with one DNA polymerase in the DNA synthesis method of the present invention. Such DNA polymerase has a reverse transcriptase activity and a strand displacement activity.
The suitable length of the template is one that provides a sufficient binding of the primer sequence due to the presence of the whole target sequence or at least a sufficient part of the target sequence in the fragment.
If a DNA as a template is a double-stranded DNA, the DNA is denatured into single-stranded DNAs to allow a primer to bind to the DNA strand as the template in the method of the present invention. Maintaining the doublestranded DNA at a temperature at which it is denatured about 95 0 C) is preferable for the denaturation.
Other processes include one in which an elevated pH is used.
In this case, the pH should be lowered in order to allow an oligonucleotide primer to bind to a target in an amplification reaction. A nucleotide sequence is successively amplified under isothermal conditions after denaturing a double-stranded DNA into single-stranded DNAs or, if an RNA is used as a template, preparing a cDNA (a single-stranded DNA) by.a reverse transcription reaction.
"Successively" means that a reaction proceeds without a change in the reaction temperature or the composition of the reaction mixture. As used herein, "isothermal" means conditions of a substantially constant temperature under which an enzyme and a nucleic acid strand function in each step.
Without being restricted by a theory, it is considered that the following steps successively and repeatedly proceeds in parallel under isothermal conditions) in the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention: a step of annealing a DNA as a template to at least one oligonucleotide primer; a step of effecting a reaction of extending a DNA that is complementary to the DNA as the template from the 3'-terminus of the primer; a step of cleaving the DNA strand extended in step with an endonuclease; a step effecting a reaction of extending a DNA from the 3'-terminus of the site cleaved in step [3] while releasing the DNA strand extended in step without degrading it from the DNA as the template; and a step of repeating step and step [4] using a double-stranded polynucleotide obtained in step The above-mentioned reaction may be conducted at a normal temperature 37 0 C) by using a mesophilic DNA polymerase such as Klenow fragment. It can also be conducted at a high temperature 50°C or higher, or 600°C or higher) by using heat-resistant enzymes (an 0 57 endonuclease and a DNA polymerase). In this case, nonspecific annealing of a primer is suppressed, resulting in increase in the specificity of DNA amplification.
00 Furthermore, the problem of forming secondary structure of a DNA as a template is solved, resulting in increase in the ability of extension of a DNA polymerase. In one C embodiment, a reverse transcription reaction and the nucleotide sequence amplification can be successively conducted in the method. In this case, a DNA having a sequence derived from an RNA can be amplified by combining the use of a reverse transcriptase with the abovementioned reaction or by using a DNA polymerase having a reverse transcription activity.
Described herein is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence using a single-stranded DNA as a template and at least one chimeric oligonucleotide primer.
It is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence, characterized in that the method comprises: treating a nucleic acid as a template with at least one primer that is substantially complementary to a part of the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the template, wherein the primer is a 0N 58 chimeric oligonucleotide primer containing a o deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on 00 the 3'-terminal side of the primer for cleavage with an endonuclease; S(b) cleaving the primer-extended strand of a doublestranded nucleic acid obtained in step with the endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; and extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step to effect a strand displacement.
Also described herein is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence using a single-stranded DNA as a template and at least two chimeric oligonucleotide primers.
It is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence using at least two primers, characterized in that the method comprises: treating a nucleic acid as a template with at least one primer that is substantially complementary to a part of the nucleotide sequence of the nucleic acid and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the template, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer containing a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer for cleavage with an endonuclease; cleaving the primer-extended strand of a double-stranded nucleic acid obtained in step with the endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step (b) to effect a strand displacement, wherein a double-stranded nucleic acid containing a regenerated primer-extended strand is reused in step treating a released displaced strand obtained in step as.a template with at least one primer that is different from that used in step and a DNA polymerase to synthesize a primer-extended strand that is complementary to the displaced strand, wherein the primer that is different from that used in step is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is substantially complementary to a part of the nucleotide sequence of the displaced 60 Sstrand and contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a o ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer for 00 cleavage with an endonuclease; cleaving the primer-extended strand of a doublestranded nucleic acid obtained in step with the endonuclease at a site that contains the ribonucleotide; and extending a nucleotide sequence that is complementary to the template using a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity from the 3'-terminus of the primer portion of the double-stranded nucleic acid in which the primer-extended strand is cleaved obtained in step to effect a strand displacement, wherein a double-stranded nucleic acid containing a regenerated primer-extended strand is reused in step Also described herein is a method in which the amplification of a nucleotide sequence according to the methods described above is conducted using a singlestranded DNA as a template obtained after a pretreatment step of denaturing a double-stranded DNA into singlestranded DNAs.
Also described herein is a method in which the O 61 amplification of a nucleotide sequence according to the o methods above is conducted using a cDNA as a template obtained after a step of preparing a single-stranded cDNA by a reverse transcription reaction using an RNA as a 00 5 template.
As used herein, "a regenerated primer-extended Sstrand" refers to a DNA strand complementary to a nucleotide sequence as a template which is extended from an oligonucleotide primer newly utilized for duplication as a result of a strand displacement.
As used herein, "reuse" means that a double-stranded DNA composed of a nucleotide sequence as a template and a regenerated primer-extended strand is utilized again in a step of strand displacement.
In each of the above-mentioned methods, a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is complementary to a singlestranded DNA as a template is first annealed to the DNA.
A DNA that is complementary to the DNA as the template (a primer-extended strand) is then extended along the remaining sequence of the DNA as the template from the 3'terminus of the primer by the action of a DNA polymerase to synthesize a double-stranded DNA. An endonuclease acts on the double-stranded DNA to cleave it at a site on the 3'-terminal side of the ribonucleotide portion in the chimeric oligonucleotide primer. The endonuclease does not cleave the DNA at other sites. Thus, the endonuclease acts as a nicking enzyme that introduces a nick into the double-stranded DNA. The endonuclease may alter the structure of the double-stranded DNA composed of the chimeric oligonucleotide primer and the DNA as the template although the present invention is not restricted by a theory. A DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity re-extends a DNA strand from the 3'-terminus of the nick introduced in the double-stranded DNA to generate a new primer-extended strand while releasing the DNA downstream of the 3'-terminus of the nick. Thus, the new primer-extended strand replaces the previously synthesized primer-extended strand.
The method for amplifying a nucleotide -sequence of the present invention can be carried out using two primers, a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is complementary to a nucleic acid as a template and another chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is complementary to a displaced strand. In this case, one primer binds to a DNA strand as a template to cause a strand displacement reaction, whereas another primer binds to a displaced strand released as a result of the strand displacement reaction to initiate another strand displacement reaction.
It is clear that a reaction product with one primer can function as a template for another primer if this aspect is used. Thus, the amount of amplification product increases in a non-linear manner as the amount of the template increases.
When the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention is conducted using a double-stranded DNA as a template, a chimeric oligonucleotide primer, four deoxyribonucleotide triphosphates (dNTPs), a DNA polymerase and an endonuclease are added to a reaction mixture before or after the doublestranded DNA is denatured. If heat treatment is used for denaturing the double-stranded DNA and a heat-resistant enzyme is not used, it is preferable to add the enzyme after the denaturation.
As described above in an endonuclease used in the method should be selected such that it cleaves a strand at a ribonucleotide portion of a primer. Preferably, the strand is cleaved at a site 3' to the ribonucleotide.
One should select a DNA polymerase such that it dissociates a nicked DNA strand at a reasonable rate.
The DNA polymerase used in the present invention should synthesize an extended strand from the nicked site towards the downstream while displacing a previously extended DNA strand. It is important that the DNA polymerase should not exhibit a exonuclease activity that may degrade the displaced strand. For example, Klenow fragment, which is an exonuclease-deficient variant of DNA polymerase I from E. coli, a similar fragment derived from Bst DNA polymerase (New England Biolabs), and Bca BEST DNA polymerase from B. ca (Takara Shuzo) are useful as such a DNA polymerase. Sequenase 1.0 and Sequenase 2.0 (United States Biochemical), and T5 DNA polymerase and p29 DNA polymerase as described in Gene, 97:13-19 (1991) can also be used. A polymerase that normally has an exonuclease activity can be used in the DNA synthesis method of the present invention if addition of an appropriate inhibitor can inhibit the activity.
The method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention may be conducted at varying temperatures or it may be conducted isothermally. Varying temperatures mean that the reaction temperatures are changed for respective steps such that the change does not interfere with the reactions in the steps. Specifically, varying temperatures refer to change in temperature to that suitable for, for example, each of annealing of a primer, synthesis reaction of a complementary strand, nicking of a complementary strand and a displacement reaction.
On the other hand, isothermal means that the reaction temperature for each step is unchanged and each step is conducted at a substantially constant temperature.
It is natural to select the temperature to optimize the reaction conditions in both cases.
One feature of the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention is that the method does not require adjusting the temperature up and down during the nucleic acid synthesis. Thus, the present invention provides a method for isothermally synthesizing a nucleotide sequence. Many of conventional nucleic acid amplification methods require adjusting the temperature up and down to dissociate a target from a synthesized strand.
These methods require a special reaction equipment such as a thermal cycler for this purpose. However, the method of the present invention can be conducted only using an equipment that can keep a constant temperature.
As described above, the method of the present invention can be conducted at a single temperature.
Preferably, it is conducted by selecting the reaction temperature and the stringency level such that non-specific annealing of a primer is decreased and such that the primer specifically anneals to a nucleotide sequence as a template.
Although it is not intended to limit the present invention, the method, of the present invention can be conducted under high-temperature conditions by using a heat-resistant enzyme as described above. In addition, it is preferable to conduct the method of the present invention at an appropriate temperature for sufficiently retaining the activity of the enzyme used in order to maintain the reaction efficiency at high level. Thus, the reaction us, the reaction temperature is preferably about 200°C to about 80 0 C, more preferably about 30 0 C to about 750C, most preferably about 0 C to about 700°C although it varies depending on the enzyme used. When the reaction is conducted under hightemperature conditions in particular, it is preferable to use a longer primer than that for a reaction at a normal temperature. The sequence and the length of the primer appropriate for the reaction temperature may be determined, for example, with reference to its Tm value. Alternatively, a commercially available software for designing a primer such as OLIGOTM Primer Analysis software (Takara Shuzo) may be used. For example, when a reaction temperature of to 60°C or 650°C is used, the primer used for the method of the present invention may be, for example, without limitation, 12-100 nucleotides in length, preferably 14-50 nucleotides in length, more preferably 15-40 nucleotides in length. An example of effects brought by the elevated reaction temperature is the solution of a problem of forming secondary structure of a DNA as a template. The elevated reaction temperature enables amplification of a desired nucleic acid even if a nucleic acid having a high GC content is used as a template. Furthermore, it is similarly effective in amplifying a region of a long chain length. Such effect is observed in a range between about 100 bp and about 20 kbp, specifically between about 200 bp and about 4.3 kbp, more specifically about 250 bp and about 1500 bp.
Use of a DNA polymerase having a reverse transcriptase activity Bca BEST DNA polymerase) in the method of the present invention makes the amplification of a nucleotide sequence from an RNA, which comprises a step of preparing a cDNA from an RNA (a reverse transcription reaction), be conveniently conducted.
Alternatively, a product obtained by independently conducting a step of preparing a cDNA from an RNA, a cDNA, can .be used in the method of the present invention as the DNA as a template.
In each case, the reaction in the method of the present invention is repeated until it is terminated by appropriate means, for example, by inactivating the enzyme or by lowering the reaction temperature, or until the reaction is deprived of one of the reagents.
Figure 1 illustrates one embodiment in which a single-stranded DNA as a template and two primers are used.
Respective steps, which are successively conducted in parallel, are described below: a step of annealing a single-stranded DNA as a template to a chimeric oligonucleotide primer; a step of effecting a DNA extension reaction from the 3 '-terminus of the primer to form a primerextended strand; a step of cleaving at a site that contains a ribonucleotide in the primer with an endonuclease; a step of effecting a strand displacement using a DNA polymerase from the cleavage site in step a step of reusing a double-stranded
DNA,
which is composed of a template obtained in step and a regenerated primer-extended strand, in step while utilizing a released displaced strand in a reaction of step and the following steps; a step annealing an oligonucleotide primer that is different from that in step to the released displaced strand in step as a template; a step of effecting a DNA extension reaction from the 3'-terminus of the primer to form a primerextended strand; a step of cleaving at a site that contains a ribonucleotide in the primer with an endonuclease; a step of effecting a strand displacement using a DNA polymerase from the cleavage site in step and a step of reusing a template obtained in step and a regenerated primer-extended strand in step When a double-stranded DNA is used as a template, each of the single-stranded DNAs obtained after denaturing the double-stranded DNA serves as the template in step Therefore, the amount of amplification product is more than that obtained with a single-stranded DNA as a template. In addition, detection of the amplification product can be conducted in a shorter time than that required when a single-stranded DNA is used as a template.
The method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention can be used for various experimental procedures that utilize amplification of a nucleotide sequence including detection, labeling and sequencing of a nucleic acid.
Furthermore, the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention can be used for an in situ nucleic acid amplification method, a method for amplifying a nucleic acid on a solid substrate such as a DNA chip, or a multiplex nucleic acid amplification method in which plural regions are simultaneously amplified.
One of the features of the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention is its ability to prepare a single-stranded DNA. One or two chimeric oligonucleotide primer can be used in the method for this purpose. For example, if two oligonucleotide primers are used, the method of the present invention can be conducted applying a primer ratio as used for the socalled asymmetric PCR method in which an amplification reaction is carried out using an excess amount of one oligonucleotide primer relative .to another. As a result, the amount of the replacement product from one strand becomes excessive relative to that from another.
According to the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention, a singlestranded DNA substantially free of a complementary strand thereto can be prepared. For example, a single-stranded DNA for producing a material having an immobilized nucleic acid such as a DNA chip, a single-stranded DNA probe for detecting a target nucleic acid, or a mega-primer for the long-chain PCR method can be readily produced in a short time. Only a sense sequence or an antisense sequence can be selectively amplified by using the method of the present invention. Thus, the present invention is useful as a method for producing a nucleic acid having a sense sequence or a antisense sequence.
Furthermore, the methods for. amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the preset invention does not require the use of a reaction equipment that can adjust a temperature over time. Therefore, an amplification reaction can be conducted in a large volume of reaction mixture. Thus, a nucleic acid for medical use) can be industrially produced in large quantities.
71 SThe utilization efficiency of the primer used in the 0 method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention is about 100%, which may be 5- to 00 higher that that in a conventional method such as the PCR i 5 method.
Kit for the method for amplifying nucleotide sequence.
Described herein is a kit used for the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the method described above. In one form, the kit is in a packaged form and contains instructions regarding the use of a DNA polymerase and an endonuclease in a strand displacement reaction. Also, a kit that contains a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity, an endonuclease, and a buffer for a strand displacement reaction is preferably used. Alternatively, a commercially available DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity and/or endonuclease may be selected according to the instructions and used. Additionally, the kit may contain a reagent for a reverse transcription reaction that is used when an RNA is used as a template. The DNA polymerase can be selected from the DNA polymerases to be used as described above in The endonuclease can be selected from the endonucleases as described above in One having the reaction buffer composition as described above in can be preferably used as the buffer for the strand displacement reaction.
"Instructions" are printed matter describing a method of using the kit, for example, a method for preparing a reagent solution for a strand displacement reaction, recommended reaction conditions and the like.
The instructions include an instruction manual in a form of a pamphlet or a leaflet, a label stuck to the kit, and description on the surface of the package containing the kit. The instructions also include information disclosed or provided through electronic media such as the Internet.
Method for detecting nucleotide sequence of the present invention and kit for the method.
A target nucleic acid in a sample can be detected by using the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention. The detection method comprises: amplifying a target nucleic acid by the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention as described above; and detecting the target nucleic acid amplified in the step above.
The method can be utilized to detect or quantify a specific gene in a sample. In other words, a specific gene can be detected or quantified form all samples suspected to contain a nucleic acid such as a DNA or an RNA.
Examples of the samples from which a specific gene can be detected or quantified include, but are not limited to, samples from organisms such as a whole blood, a serum, a buffy coat, a urine, feces, a cerebrospinal fluid, a seminal fluid, a saliva, a tissue a cancerous tissue or a lymph node) and a cell culture a mammalian cell culture or a bacterial cell culture), samples that contain a nucleic acid such as a viroid, a virus, a bacterium, a fungi, a yeast, a plant and an animal, samples suspected to be contaminated or infected with a micoorganism such as a virus or a bacterium a food or a biological formulation), and samples that may contain an organism such as a soil and a waste water. For example, a viroid, a virus, a fungi, a bacterium or other microorganisms in a sample can be detected or quantified on the basis of the presence or the content of a specific gene derived from the viroid, the virus, the fungi, the bacterium or the other microorganisms as a target. Furthermore, the method of the present invention can be used to distinguish a genotype of an organism or to determine the expression level of a gene.
Both of an RNA and a DNA can be preferably used as the nucleic acid as the template in the detection method.
Known methods for detecting a nucleic acid can be used for step Examples of such methods include detection of a reaction product having a specific size by electrophoresis, and detection by hybridization with a probe. A fluorescent substance such as ethidium bromide is used in the detection by electrophoresis. The hybridization with a probe may be combined with the detection by electrophoresis. The probe may be labeled with a radioisotope or with a non-radioactive substance such as biotin or a fluorescent substance. Additionally, use of a labeled nucleotide in step may facilitate the detection of amplification product. A fluorescence polarization method, a fluorescence energy transition or the like can also be utilized for the detection. The target nucleic acid can be detected automatically or quantified by constructing a suitable detection system.
A ribonucleotide (RNA) probe labeled with two or more fluorescent substances positioned at a distance that results in a quenching state can be used in the detection method of the present invention. The probe does not emit fluorescence. When it is annealed to a DNA amplified from a target nucleic acid that is complementary to the probe, RNase H digests the probe. The distance between the fluorescent substances on the probe then increases, resulting in the emission of fluorescence. Thus, the emission reveals the presence of the target nucleic acid.
If RNase H is used in the method for amplifying a S- 75 nucleotide sequence of the present invention, a target o nucleic acid can be detected only by adding a probe to the reaction mixture. For example, a combination of 00 fluorescent substances, 6-carboxyfluorescein (6-FAM) and N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-6-carboxyrhodamine (TAMRA), can be preferably used for labeling the probe.
The method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence under isothermal conditions of the present invention does not require the use of an equipment such as a thermal cycler.
The number of primers used in the amplification method of the present invention can be one or two, which is less than that used in a conventional method. Since reagents such as dNTPs used for PCR and the like can be applied to the method of the present invention, the running cost can be lowered as compared with a conventional method.
Therefore, the method of the present invention can be preferably used in a field including genetic test in which the detection is routinely conducted. The method of the present invention provides a larger amount of an amplification product in a shorter time than the PCR method. Therefore, the method of the present invention can be utilized as a convenient, rapid and sensitive method for detecting a gene.
Also described herein is a kit used for the method 0 76 0 for detecting a target nucleic acid. The kit for the o method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence as described above can be used as this kit. The kit may further contain a chimeric oligonucleotide primer for amplifying 00 5 the target nucleic acid and a reagent for detecting the C amplified target nucleic acid such as a probe.
C(8) Material having immobilized nucleic acid arrayed in predefined region and method for producing the same.
A DNA chip (also referred to as a DNA microarray or a DNA array) is a material having an immobilized nucleic acid in which various fragments of genes or DNAs are arrayed and immobilized in a predefined region or at a predefined position on a solid substrate such as a slide glass. The DNA chip is used for examining the presence of a nucleic acid in a nucleic acid sample that has a sequence complementary to an arrayed and immobilized DNA in a predefined region on the DNA chip. The examination is carried out by contacting the DNA chip with the nucleic acid sample prepared from a sample, preferably a labeled nucleic acid sample, for hybridization. Since the DNA chip can be used to detect or quantify a number of nucleic acids in a sample in one procedure, it is a very useful means that dramatically promotes the analysis of gene expression, or the analysis of a mutation or polymorphism.
A DNA chip in which a double-stranded nucleic acid is arrayed and immobilized in a predefined region is used for hybridization after it is subjected to appropriate denaturation. A DNA chip in which a single-stranded
DNA
complementary to a target nucleic acid to be detected is arrayed and immobilized in a predefined region is particularly preferable for the detection of a target nucleic acid.
As described above, a desired DNA can be amplified in a single-stranded form by the method of the present invention. Although any method for purifying an amplification product can be used, purification using isopropanol precipitation is preferable. The thus obtained DNA, preferably a single-stranded DNA substantially free of a complementary strand thereto, can be preferably used as a DNA fragment to be immobilized onto a DNA chip. Thus, the method of the present invention is preferably used as a method for preparing a DNA to be arrayed and immobilized in .a predefined region for producing a DNA chip. Any insoluble substrate can be used as a substrate onto which the thus obtained DNA is arrayed and immobilized in a predefined region, but a plate-shaped substrate made from glass or plastic, and a membrane-shaped substrate made from nitrocellulose or nylon are preferably used. A known method for immobilizing a nucleic acid can be used for the 78 immobilization. The DNA may be immobilized onto a 0 substrate as it is. Alternatively, the DNA may be immobilized through a suitable linker or after ligating plural DNA molecules.
00 5 A target nucleic acid that hybridizes with a nucleic acid on a material having an immobilized nucleic acid in which a DNA amplified by the method of the present (1 invention is arrayed and immobilized in a predefined region a DNA chip) can be detected or quantified.
Such detection or quantification can be accomplished by contacting the material with a nucleic acid sample prepared from a sample suspected to contain the target nucleic acid for hybridization. Among these, a DNA chip in which a single-stranded DNA amplified by the method of the present invention is arrayed and immobilized in a predefined region allows the detection of a target nucleic acid with more convenient operation, higher sensitivity and higher reproducibility as compared with a conventional material.
Method for producing nucleic acid in large quantities.
Described above is a method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence that can be carried out under isothermal conditions. A desired nucleic acid can be produced in the method by mixing a nucleic acid as a template for the nucleic acid to be amplified and various components required for a reaction and reacting the mixture under isothermal conditions. Since the PCR method requires changing the temperature of the reaction mixture over time, the reaction volume is limited to one in which the temperature can be controlled (usually, 200 p1 or less) Therefore, it is difficult to scale up the volume. On the other hand, there is no such limitation in the method of the present invention. A large amount of nucleic acid can be produced by increasing the volume of the reaction mixture. In the method of the present invention, a number of complementary. strand molecules are synthesized from one template molecule. Furthermore, nucleic acids can be synthesized using these complementary strand molecules as templates. Thus, a desired nucleic acid can be efficiently produced in large quantities by suitably selecting the template and the primer. Additionally, the fact that, unlike the PCR method, the method of the present invention does not require a special equipment or a complicated temperature change makes it advantageous in view of the cost of equipment and energy. Therefore, the method is an excellent industrial method for producing a nucleic acid in large quantities.
Furthermore, the method of the present invention is useful as a method for supplying a variety of DNA fragments in large quantities, such as those to be immobilized onto the DNA chip. Specifically, DNA fragments can be obtained in large quantities in simple reaction steps in one embodiment. In another embodiment, a limited number of primers can be used to obtain a variety DNA fragments. A step of amplifying the nucleic acid that serves as the template in the method of the present invention beforehand by a known nucleic acid amplification method such as the PCR method can be incorporated in the latter embodiment. All kinds of nucleic acids as templates can be amplified using a limited number of primers, for example, based on the method for amplifying a nucleic acid using a random primer having a tag sequence (Nucleic Acids Research, 24(19):3778-3783 (1996)) or the degenerate oligonucleotide-primed PCR (DOP-PCR; Genomics, 13:718-725 (1992)), which uses a degenerate primer. The amplification method of the present invention can be conducted using one or several primers for all of the nucleic acids as templates produced in the above-mentioned step. This can be accomplished by designing the primer used in the amplification method of the present invention such that it corresponds to the tag sequence added to the random or degenerate primer. Thus, a combination of a suitable step for preparing a nucleic acid as a template and the method of the present invention can supply a variety of DNA fragments in larger quantities and at a lower cost as compared with a conventional method.
A pharmaceutical composition containing a nucleic acid may contain a double-stranded DNA for expressing a useful polypeptide in a cell or a single-stranded antisense DNA for suppressing the expression of a gene of interest.
Such a nucleic acid is administered into an organism using a suitable means, for example, a carrier for gene transfer such as liposome. The method for producing a nucleic acid of the present invention is preferable for producing a single-stranded or double-stranded nucleic acid for medical use in large quantities. Additionally, a nucleic acid containing a dNTP analog that, for example, suppresses the degradation of the nucleic acid in vivo can be readily produced by the method of the present invention.
Since the DNA fragment amplified in the present invention is composed of normal nucleotides, the amplified DNA can be subcloned into a suitable vector utilizing a restriction enzyme site in the DNA. Furthermore, the DNA can be treated with a restriction enzyme for RFLP without a problem, for example. Therefore, the DNA can be widely utilized in a field of genetic test. Since the DNA fragment amplified in the present invention is composed of normal nucleotides, a promoter sequence for an RNA polymerase can be incorporated into the amplified fragment.
The amplified fragment can be used as a template to synthesize an RNA, which can be used as a probe, for example. Of course, a fluorescence-labeled DNA probe can be produced by conducting the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention using a fluorescence-labeled dNTP instead of a normal dNTP.
Since the finally amplified fragment in the method of the present invention does not have a nucleotide sequence complementary to a primer for amplification on both ends, contamination due to the carry-over of an amplification product can be reduced. Therefore, the method of the present invention is useful in genetic test and the like in which the same region is amplified routinely.
Features of the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention are listed below.
1. It can amplify a large amount of a nucleic acid from a small amount of a template. The amplification product increases quadratically when two primers are used.
2. It can be conducted isothermally. In this case, it does not require the use of an equipment such as a thermal cycler. Therefore, the reaction volume can be readily scaled up.
3. Usually, the amplification reaction is conducted using one or two chimeric oligonucleotide primer and two enzymes (a DNA polymerase and an endonuclease).
4. Since a number of DNA strands are synthesized from one molecule of a primer, the amount of the primer does not restrict the amount of the amplification product. Furthermore, the primer utilization efficiency is about 100%, which is very higher than that of the PCR method.
A single-stranded or double-stranded DNA can be selectively amplified depending on the purpose.
6. Since it does not require a dNTP analog such as an dNTP for the amplification reaction, the cost of reagents is low. Furthermore, a nucleic acid in a natural form without a dNTP analog can be obtained.
7. It can supply an amplified DNA fragment at low cost and in large quantities by combining the method of the present invention with another nucleic acid amplification method.
As described above, the method of the present invention is suitable for producing a nucleic acid on an industrial scale.
Examples The following Examples illustrate the present invention in more detail, but are not to be construed to limit the scope thereof.
Referential Example Unit value of RNase H used in the method of the present invention was measured according to the following method.
Preparation of reagent solutions used Reaction mixture for determining activity: The following substances at the indicated final concentrations were contained in sterile water: 40 mM tris-hydrochloride (pH 7.7 at 37°C), 4 mM magnesium chloride, 1 mM DTT, 0.003% BSA, 4% glycerol and 24 pM poly(dT).
Poly[8- 3 H]adenylic acid solution: 370 kBq of. a poly[8- 3 H]adenylic acid solution was dissolved in 200 pl of sterile water.
Polyadenylic acid solution: Polyadenylic acid was diluted to a concentration of 3 mM with sterile ultrapure water.
Enzyme dilution solution: The following substances at the indicated final concentrations were contained in sterile water: 25 mM tris-hydrochloride (pH at 37'C), 5 mM 2-mercaptoethanol, 0.5 mM EDTA (pH at 37°C), 30 mM sodium chloride and 50% glycerol.
Preparation of heat-denatured calf thymus DNA: 200 mg of calf thymus DNA was suspended and swelled in 100 ml of TE buffer. The solution was diluted to a concentration of 1 mg/ml with sterile ultrapure water based on the absorbance measured at UV 260 nm. The diluted solution was heated at 100°C for 10 minutes and then rapidly cooled in an ice bath.
Method for measuring activity 7 1l of the poly[8-3H] adenylic acid solution was added to 985 pl of the reaction mixture for determining activity prepared in above. The mixture was incubated at 370°C for 10 minutes. 8 pl of polyadenylic acid was added to the mixture to make the final concentration to 24 pM. The mixture was further incubated at 37°C for minutes. Thus, 1000 pl of a poly[8- 3 H]rA-poly-dT. reaction mixture was prepared. 200 pl of the reaction mixture was then incubated at 30°C for 5 minutes. 1 pl of an appropriate serial dilution of an enzyme solution was added thereto. 50 pl each of samples was taken from the reaction mixture over time for use in subsequent measurement. The period of time in minutes from the addition of the enzyme to the sampling is defined as Y. 50 pl of a reaction mixture for total CPM or for blank.was prepared by adding 1 pl of the enzyme dilution solution instead of an enzyme solution. 100 pl of 100 mM sodium pyrophosphate, 50 p1 of the heat-denatured calf thymus DNA solution and 300 p1 of trichloroacetic acid (300 pl of ultrapure water for measuring total CPM) were added to the sample. The mixture was incubated at 0°C for 5 minutes, and then centrifuged at 10000 rpm for 10 minutes. After centrifugation, 250 p1 of the resulting supernatant was placed in a vial. 10 ml of Aquasol-2 (NEN Life Science Products) was added thereto.
CPM was measured in a liquid scintillation counter.
Calculation of units Unit value for each enzyme was calculated according to the following equation.
Unit/ml {(measured CPM blank CPM) x 1.2* x 20 x 1000 x dilution rate} 200 (total CPM x Y (min.) x 50 x Amount in nmol of poly H] rA-poly-dT contained in total CPM per 50 pl.
Correction coefficient.
Example 1 Synthesis of template DNA and primers A single-stranded DNA of 99 bases as a template and primers used in this Example were synthesized using a DNA synthesizer (Applied Biosystems). The nucleotide sequence of the single-stranded DNA of 99 bases is shown in SEQ ID NO:1 of the Sequence Listing. Basic nucleotide sequences of an upstream primer and a downstream primer are shown in SEQ ID NOS:2 and 3 of the Sequence Listing, respectively. The structures of the primers used in this Example are described below in detail: Primer Pair 1: A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:2 or 3 of the Sequence Listing and wholly composed of deoxyribonucleotides; Primer Pair 2: A combination of primers in which the first and second deoxyribonucleotides from the 3'terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides and the phosphate bond on the 5'-terminal side of the second ribonucleotide from the 3'-terminus is replaced by a phosphorothicate bond in each.of the primers of the Primer Pair 1; Primer Pair 3: A combination of primers in which the deoxyribonucleotide at the 31 -terminus is replaced by a ribonucleotide and the phosphate bond on the side of the ribonucleotide is replaced by a phosphorothioate bond in each of the primers of the Primer Pair 1; Primer Pair 4: A combination of primers in which the first and second deoxyribonucleotides from the 3'terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides in each of the primers of the Primer Pair 1; and Primer Pair 5: A combination of primers in which the third and fourth deoxyribonucleotides from the 3'terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides and the phosphate bond on the 5'-terminal side of the fourth ribonucleotide from the 3'-terminus is replaced by a phosphorothioate bond in each of the primers of the Primer Pair 1.
Amplification reaction Bca BEST DNA polymerase (Takara Shuzo), which is a DNA polymerase lacking a exonuclease activity from Bacillus caldotenax, and cloned ribonuclease H (Takara Shuzo), which is RNase H from E. coli, were used to examine the reaction systems of Models 1 to 7 as described below.
A reaction mixture was prepared as follows.
35 mM tris-hydrochloride buffer (pH 0.1 mg/ml bovine serum albumin (BSA), 2.7% glycerol, dimethyl sulfoxide, 1.4 mM each of dNTPs, 10 mM magnesium chloride, 20 pmol of one or both of the primers of one of the primer pairs as described above in 0.6 ng of the synthetic single-stranded DNA as the template, 5 U of Bca BEST DNA polymerase and 60 U of cloned ribonuclease H, the final reaction volume being 50 1l. The reaction mixture was mixed to homogeneity, incubated at 55°C for 60 minutes, and then heated at 90 °C for 2 minutes to inactivate the enzymes. 8 pl of the reaction mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 3% NuSieve 3:1 agarose (Takara Shuzo) gel. The primers used in the respective Models are described below: Models 1-5: One of the Primer Pairs 1-5 was used; Model 6: Only the downstream primer of the Primer Pair 2 was used; and Model 7: The Primer Pair 4 was used without the addition of RNase H.
As a result, amplified fragments having a size of interest ranging from about 40 base pairs (bp) to about bp were observed when the reaction mixtures of the Models 2 to 5 were used, indicating that DNAs are amplified using these reaction systems. An amplified fragment having an expected size of about 70 bases (a single-stranded DNA fragment) was observed for the Model 6 in which only one of the two primers was used. No DNA amplification was observed for the reaction of the Model 1 or 7.
Confirmation of amplification products The reaction mixture obtained by the reaction of the Model 4 as described in was filtrated using Microcon-100 (Takara Shuzo) to recover an amplified DNA fragment entrapped on the filter. The nucleotide sequence of the DNA fragment was determined by the dideoxy method.
As a result, the fragment amplified by the above-mentioned reaction was confirmed to be a DNA having the same nucleotide sequence as that of the DNA as the template.
Examination of reaction time The reaction mixture of the Model 2 as described above in was prepared to study the change in the amount of the amplification product when it was reacted for a varying time. The reaction mixture was incubated for 0, 60, 90 or 120 minutes at 55'C. The mixture was then treated at 90 0 C for 2 minutes to inactivate the enzymes. 8 P1 of the reaction mixture was analyzed by electrophoresis on 3% NuSieve 3:1 agarose gel. The results of the electrophoresis are shown in Figure 2. Numbers 1 to, 6 in the figure represent lanes to which the reaction mixture reacted for 0, 15, 30, 60, 90 or 120 minutes was applied, respectively. M represents a lane to which 100 bp DNA ladder marker (Takara Shuzo) was applied as a molecular weight marker.
As shown in Figure 2, no amplification product was observed for a reaction time of 0 minute. It was confirmed that the amount of the amplification product increased as the reaction time became longer from minutes to 30 or 60 minutes. However, the amount of the amplification product as observed by electrophoresis was almost unchanged for a reaction time of 60 minutes or longer, indicating that the amplification in the reaction system used reached the plateau at about 60 minutes.
Example 2 Preparation of RNA An RNA used as a template in this Example was prepared from human cultured cell HT29 (ATCC HTB-38) (Dainippon Pharmaceutical) using TRIzol reagent (Life Technologies). The concentration of the resulting total RNA was adjusted to 1 pg/pl. The OD260/OD280 value was 1.8, which indicates the spectrophotometric purity of the RNA.
Amplification reaction Bca BEST DNA polymerase, which has a reverse transcription activity and a DNA polymerase activity, as well as RNase H endonuclease were used to determine if a cDNA is amplified from an RNA.
A reaction mixture having the composition as described in Example 2 was prepared with the addition of 1 pg of the above-mentioned total RNA. A targeted region encoding human transferrin receptor (GenBank accession no.
X01060) was amplified using the Primer Pair 2 in Example 1 as primers.
The reaction mixture was incubated at 55"C for minutes, and then heated at 90°C for 2 minutes to inactivate the enzymes. When 8 pl of the reaction mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 3% NuSieve 3:1 agarose gel, an amplified fragment having an expected size of 56 bp was observed. Furthermore, Southern hybridization was carried out using a probe having the targeted nucleotide sequence. A DNA probe having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:4 of the Sequence Listing labeled with biotin at the 5'-terminus was used to conduct Southern
U-
hybridization. As a result, the probe hybridized with the above-mentioned amplified fragment, confirming that the targeted region was correctly amplified by the method of the present invention.
Example 3 Synthesis of primers The amplification method of the present invention was examined using a double-stranded DNA as a template.
Primers used were synthesized using a DNA synthesizer (Applied Biosystems). Basic nucleotide sequences of primers, are shown in SEQ ID NOS:5-13 of the Sequence Listing. The structures of. the primers used in this Example are described below in detail. The pUC19 DNA (Takara Shuzo) was used as a template for the Primer Pairs A-F. The nucleotide sequence of pUC19 is available from a database (GenBank accession no. L09137). An amplified double-stranded DNA fragment was used as a template for the Primer Pair G. The fragment was prepared from the human total RNA obtained in Example 2 using primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NOS:14 or 15 of the Sequence Listing and TaKaRa RNA PCR Kit (AMV) Ver. 2.1 (Takara Shuzo) according to the attached standard protocol.
Primer Pair A (amplified fragment length: about 450 bp): A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:5 or 6 of the Sequence Listing in which the first and second bases from the 3'terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides; Primer Pair B (amplified fragment length: about 250 bp) A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:5 .or 7 of the Sequence Listing in which the first and second bases from the 3'terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides; Primer Pair C (amplified fragment length: about 520 bp): A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:5 or 8 of the Sequence Listing in which the first and second bases from the 3'terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides; Primer Pair D (amplified fragment length: about 890 bp): A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:5 or 9 of the Sequence Listing in which the first and second bases from the 3'terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides; Primer Pair E (amplified fragment length: about 130 bp) A combination of primers having a nucleotidE sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:10 or 6 of the SequencE Listing in which the first to third bases from the 3' terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides; Primer Pair F (amplified fragment length: abou t e t 220 bp): A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:11 or 6 of the Sequence Listing in which the first to third bases from the 3'terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides; and Primer Pair G (amplified fragment length: about 320 bp): A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:12 or 13 of the Sequence Listing in which the first to third bases from the 3'terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides.
Amplification reaction A reaction mixture was prepared as follows.
mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 0.1 mg/ml bovine serum albumin (BSA), 5% dimethyl sulfoxide, 1.4 mM each of dNTPs, 10 mM magnesium chloride, 60 pmol each of the primers of one of the primer pairs as described above in 100 ng of the pUC19 DNA as the template, U of Bca BEST DNA polymerase and 60 U of RNase H to a final reaction volume of 50 pl.
The reaction conditions were as follows. The reaction mixture without the DNA polymerase or RNase H was heat-denatured at 98°C for 1 minute, and then cooled to The DNA polymerase and RNase H were then added thereto and the mixture was incubated at 55°C for minutes. After the completion of the reaction, the mixture was heated at 90°C for 2 minutes to inactivate the enzymes.
8 pl of the reaction mixture was then subjected to electrophoresis on 3% NuSieve 3:1 agarose gel.
As a result, it was confirmed that an amplified fragment of interest was obtained using either of the Primer Pairs. Thus, it was confirmed that a doublestranded DNA can be used as a template to conduct an amplification reaction in the amplification method of the present invention.
Digestion of amplification product with restriction enzyme Digestion of an amplified fragment obtained using the amplification method of the present invention with a restriction enzyme was examined. The pUCl9 plasmid DNA was used as a template DNA. pUC19 upper NN primer and pUC19 lower NN primer as shown in SEQ ID NOS:5 and 6 of the Sequence Listing, respectively, were used. In the primers, the first and second bases from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides. The composition of the reaction mixture was as follows.
Reaction Mixture A: 35 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 10 mM magnesium chloride, 1.4 mM each of dNTPs, 0.01% BSA, 5% DMSO, 2.7% glycerol, 100 pmol each of the pUC19 upper NN primer and the pUC19 lower NN primer, 500 ng of the pUC19 DNA and sterile distilled water to a reaction volume of 48 1l.
The reaction mixture was heat-denatured at 98°C for 1 minute, and then cooled to 55°C. 60 U of E. coli RNase H and 5.5 U of Bca BEST were then added thereto to make the reaction volume to 50 p1. The reaction mixture was incubated at 55°C for 1 hour. After the completion of the reaction, the mixture was heated at 90°C for 2 minutes to inactivate the enzymes. The reaction mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 3% agarose gel to purify the resulting amplification product. The recovered amplification product was resupended in 100 pl of sterile distilled water.
The thus obtained DNA solution was used for restriction enzyme digestion. Restriction enzymes used were AccII (Takara Shuzo) and BcnI (Takara Shuzo). The composition of the reaction mixture was as follows.
3 pl of the DNA solution, 1 pl of 10 x AccII buffer or 10 x BcnI buffer attached to each of the enzymes, 1 pl of the restriction enzyme AccII or BcnI and sterile distilled water to a reaction volume of 10 pl. The reaction mixture was reacted at 37°C for 30 minutes. pl of 10 x loading buffer was added thereto. 6 pl of the mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 3% NuSieve agarose gel.
As a result, restriction enzyme-digested DNA fragments of interest were obtained using both of the restriction enzymes AccII and BcnI.
Detection of mutation Detection of a mutation using the amplification method of the present invention was examined. pUC19 was used as a template. Basic nucleotide sequences of pUC19 upper NN primer and pUC19 ,lower NN primer are shown in SEQ ID NOS:5 and 6 of the Sequence Listing, respectively.
Both of these primers are chimeric oligonucleotide primers in which the first and second bases from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleic acids. Additionally, four primers in which the base at' the 3'-terminus of the pUC19 upper NN primer is replaced by U (which is complementary to the corresponding base in the template), or A, C or G (which is a mismatched base) designated as pUC19 upper NN-U, pUC19 upper NN-A, pUC19 upper (2) NN-C or pUC19 upper NN-G, respectively, were made. The combinations of these primers were as follows.
Primer Pair 1: pUC19 upper NN-U and pUC19 lower NN; Primer Pair 2: pUC19 upper NN-A and pUC19 lower NN; Primer Pair 3: pUC19 upper NN-C and pUC19 lower NN; and Primer Pair 4: pUC19 upper NN-G and pUC19 lower NN.
A reaction mixture was prepared as follows.
mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 0.01% bovine serum albumin (BSA), 5% DMSO, 1 mM each of dNTPs, 8 mM magnesium acetate, 60 pmol each of the primers, 50 ng of the DNA as the template and sterile distilled water to a reaction volume of 48 pl.
The reaction mixture was heat-denatured at 98°C for 1 minute, and then cooled to 55°C. 5.5 U of Bca BEST DNA polymerase and 60 U of E. coli RNase H were then added thereto and the reaction mixture was incubated at 55°C for 60 minutes. The mixture was then heated at 90°C for 2 minutes to inactivate the enzymes. 8 pl of the reaction mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 4% NuSieve 3:1 agarose (Takara Shuzo) gel. As a result, an amplified fragment of about 450 bp of interest was detected only when the combination of the primers that included the primer having a complementary base at the 3'-terminus of pUC19 upper NN was used. On the other hand, no amplified fragment was observed for the combinations including the primer having a mismatched base at the 3'-terminus of pUC19 upper NN.
Example 4 Reaction in microtube Reaction volume for the amplification method of the present invention was examined. A region encoding human transferrin receptor was selected as a region to be amplified. Primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:12 or 13 of the Sequence Listing were used. In the primers, the first and second bases from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides. A fragment of about 750 bp amplified by RT-PCR was used as a template DNA. The reaction volume was adjusted to 50, 100, 300 or 500 pl.
The composition of the reaction mixture was as follows.
Reaction Mixture A: 10 pl of 5 x specialized buffer (135 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH mg/ml BSA, 2.5% DMSO), 4 pl of 100 mM magnesium acetate, pl of 10 mM dNTPs,. 10 pi of 10 pM ATP, 1 pl of Bca BEST DNA polymerase (22 U/pl), 1 pl of RNase H (60 U/pl) and sterile distilled water to 39 pl.
Reaction Mixture B: 3 pl each of 20 uM human transferrin receptor S primer (SEQ ID NO:12) and 20 pM human transferrin receptor primer (SEQ ID NO:13), about 100 ng of the DNA as the template and sterile distilled water to 11 p1. If the volume became 50 pl or more, it was scaled up to have the above-mentioned composition.
For an amplification reaction, the Reaction Mixture B was treated at 98°C for 2 minutes, and then incubated at 55°C for 3 minutes. The Reaction Mixture B was added to the Reaction Mixture A which had been preincubated in a 1500-pl microtube at 55°C. After mixing, 100 the reaction mixture was incubated at 55°C for 1 hour.
After the completion of the reaction, the mixture was transferred to an ice bath. 8 pl of the reaction mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 3% agarose gel.
As a result, a fragment of about 300 bp of interest was efficiently amplified using each of the reaction volumes. In addition, it was confirmed that an amplified fragment of interest can be obtained without a problem using a PCR-amplified fragment as a template DNA.
Reaction in Petri dish Use of a Petri dish for preventing the .heterogeneous temperature in a reaction mixture due to increased reaction volume was examined. A region encoding human transferrin receptor was selected as a region to be amplified. Primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:12 or 13 of the Sequence Listing were used. In the primers, the first and second bases from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides. A fragment of about 750 bp amplified by RT-PCR was used as a template DNA. The reaction volume was adjusted to 10 ml. The composition of the reaction mixture was as follows.
Reaction Mixture A: 2000 pl of 5 x specialized buffer (135 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH mg/ml BSA, 2.5% DMSO), 800 pl of 100 mM magnesium acetate, 1000 pl of 10 mM dNTPs and sterile distilled water to 9.1 101 ml.
Reaction Mixture B: 200 pl each of 60 iM human transferrin receptor S primer (SEQ ID NO:12) and 60 pM human transferrin receptor primer (SEQ ID NO:13), about pg of the DNA as the template and sterile distilled water to 500 1l.
Reaction Mixture C: 200 pl of Bca BEST DNA polymerase (22 U/pl) and 200 1l of RNase H (60 U/pl).
For an amplification reaction, the Reaction Mixture B was treated at 98"C for 1 minute, and then incubated at 55°C for 3 minutes. The Reaction Mixture B was added to the Reaction Mixture A which had been preincubated in a 60-mm (diameter) plastic Petri dish at The Reaction Mixture C was further added thereto. After mixing, the reaction mixture was incubated at 55°C for 1 hour. After the completion of the reaction, the reaction mixture was transferred to an ice bath. 8 pl of the reaction mixture was then subjected to electrophoresis on 3% agarose gel.
As a result, a fragment of about 300 bp of interest was efficiently amplified even if the reaction volume of 10 ml was used. In addition, it was confirmed that an amplified fragment of interest can be obtained without a problem using a PCR-amplified fragment as a template DNA. Thus, it was confirmed that the method of 102 the present invention can be more preferably used for making a DNA chip, which requires a large amount of a DNA fragment, as compared to the conventional PCR method.
Example Relationship between type of buffer and amount of RNase H used The relationship between the type of buffer and the amount of RNase H used was examined. Plasmid DNAs, in which a fragment of 249 bp or 911 bp was cloned into the pUC19 vector (designated as pUC19-249 and pUC19-911) were used as templates. Chimeric oligonucleotide primers, in which the first to third bases from the 3'-terminus of MF2N3 (24) primer or MR1N3 (24) primer having a sequence as shown, in SEQ ID NO:16 or 17 of the Sequence Listing are replaced by ribonucleotides, were used as primers. By using the combination of these primers, amplified fragments of about 450 bp and about 1100 bp are obtained for pUC19- 249 and pUC19-911, respectively.
A tris-hydrochloride buffer, a potassium phosphate buffer and Tricine buffer were selected as buffer systems to be examined. The amounts of RNase H examined were no addition and a final concentration ranging from 0.3 to 1.2 U/pl. The tris-hydrochloride buffer system was prepared as described in Example 1 except that 10 ng 103 of pUC19-249 or 200 ng of pUC19-911, 60 pmol each of the primers and 11 U/50 pl reaction volume of Bca BEST DNA polymerase were used. The potassium phosphate buffer system was prepared to have a similar composition. The Tricine buffer system was prepared to contain the following at the indicated final concentration: 34 mM Tricine buffer (pH 10 mM potassium chloride, 10 mM ammonium sulfate, 0.01% BSA, 1% DMSO, .4 mM magnesium acetate and 0.5 mM each of dNTPs. 10 ng/50 pl reaction volume of the pUC19-249 plasmid or 200 ng/50 pl reaction volume of the pUC19-911 plasmid, 60 pmol/50 pl reaction volume each of primers, RNase H at a predetermined, concentration and 11 U/50 pl reaction volume of Bca BEST DNA polymerase were added to the buffer system.
For an amplification reaction, a mixture of pUC19-249 or pUC19-911 as a template and the respective primers was heat-denatured at 98°C for 1 minute, and then cooled to 55"C. A mixture of the remaining reaction components was added thereto. The mixture was reacted at 55°C for 60 minutes. After the completion of the reaction, the mixture was cooled to 4°C and 1/10 volume of 0.5 M EDTA was added thereto to terminate the reaction. 3 il of the reaction mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 3% NuSieve 3:1 agarose (Takara Shuzo) gel.
As a result, when pUC19-249 was used as a 104 template, increase in amplification efficiency was observed depending on the buffer system used in the following order: tris-hydrochloride potassium phosphate Tricine. When pUC19-911 was used as a template, increase in amplification efficiency was observed depending on the buffer system used in the following order: tris-hydrochloride Tricine potassium phosphate. The use of RNase H at a final concentration ranging from 0.3 to 1.2 U/pl resulted in the amplified fragment of interest, although no amplified fragment of interest was observed for no addition.
Examination of amount of primer The effect of the amount of a primer used on the amplification method of the present invention was examined.
A reaction mixture system having a composition in which pUC19-249 was used as a template among the compositions as described above in was used. 60 U/50 pl reaction volume of RNase H was used for the potassium phosphate buffer system, whereas 30 U/50 pl reaction volume of RNase H was used for the tris-hydrochloride or Tricine buffer system. The examined concentration of the primer ranged from 10 to 100 pmol/50 pl. Reaction conditions and confirmation of amplification were as described above in As a result, an amplified fragment of interest was observed using each of the reaction buffer systems 105 containing the primer at a concentration ranging from 10 to 100 pmol/50 pl.
Effect of pH of reaction buffer The effect of the pH of a reaction mixture on the amplification method of the present invention was examined.
The composition of the reaction mixture was as described above in The pH examined were 7.0-8.0 for the potassium phosphate buffer system, 7.5-9.2 for the Tricine buffer system, and 7.5-9.0 for the tris-hydrochloride buffer system. Reaction conditions and confirmation of amplification were as described above in As a result, an amplified fragment of interest was observed at pH within the range used for the respective buffer systems.
Effect of additive The effect of addition of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) was examined using the reaction mixture composition of the phosphate buffer system (pH 7.5) as described above in Additionally, the effect of addition of a polyamine was also examined. The examined amount of added DMSO ranged from no addition to 10%. On the other hand, spermine tetrahydrochloride (Sigma), spermidine trihydrochloride (Sigma), acetylputrescine (Nacalai Tesque), putrescine dihydrochloride (Nacalai Tesque), trimethylene diamine (Nacalai Tesque), propylenediamine (Nacalai Tesque) 106 and diaminomethane dihydrochloride (Nacalai Tesque) were used as a polyamine. The amounts of propylenediamine and trimethylene diamine added were within the range between no addition and Other polyaminies were used within the range between no addition and 5 mM. Reaction conditions and confirmation of amplification were as described above in As a result, a DNA fragment of interest was efficiently amplified using the additive at a concentration within the indicated range: no addition to 5% of DMSO; no addition to 200 pM of spermine tetrahydrochloride or spermidine; 40 pM to 40 mM of acetylputrescine or putrescine dihydrochloride; 0.002% to 0.02% of trimethylene diamine; 0.0001% to 0.01% of propylenediamine; and 0.1 pM to 10 pM of diaminomethane dihydrochloride.
Examination of type of magnesium salt The effect of the type of a magnesium salt on the amplification method of the present invention was examined.
The pUC19 DNA was used as a template. .pUC19 upper NN 249 primer and pUC19 lower NN primer having sequences as shown in SEQ ID NOS:11 and 6 of the Sequence Listing, respectively, were used as primers. An amplified fragment of about 225 bp is obtained using a pair of these primers.
Magnesium chloride, magnesium acetate and magnesium sulfate were used as magnesium salts. The composition of the 107 reaction mixture was as follows.
mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 8 mM (final concentration) magnesium chloride, magnesium acetate or magnesium sulfate, 1.0 mM (final concentration) each of dNTPs, 50 ng of the pUC19 DNA, 60 pmol each of the primers, U of RNase H, 5.5 U of Bca BEST DNA polymerase and sterile distilled water to a reaction volume of 50 pl.
Reaction conditions and confirmation of amplification were as described above in As a result, an amplified fragment of interest was observed using each of the magnesium salts.
Examination of concentrations of magnesium and dNTPs The effects of the concentrations of magnesium and dNTPs on the amplification method of the present invention were examined. The composition of the reaction mixture was as described above in except that 25 ng of the pUC19 DNA, and magnesium and dNTPs at various concentrations were used. Reaction conditions and confirmation of amplification were as described above in In a reaction system in which the final concentration of each of dNTPs was fixed at 1 mM, an amplified fragment of interest was obtained when a final magnesium concentration ranging from 6 mM to 10 mM was used.
108 In a reaction system in which the final magnesium concentration of was fixed at 8 mM, an amplified fragment of interest was obtained when a final concentration of each of dNTPs ranging from 0.6 mM to 1.2 mM was used.
Furthermore, in a reaction system in which the final concentration of each of dNTPs was fixed at 0.5 mM, an amplified fragment of interest was obtained when a final magnesium concentration ranging from 2 mM to 6 mM was used.
In a reaction system in which the final magnesium concentration was fixed at 4 mM, an amplified fragment of interest was obtained when a final concentration of each of dNTPs ranging from 0.2 mM to 0.8 mM was used.
Examination of change in concentration of potassium phosphate buffer or Tricine buffer and reactivity The effect of the concentration of the potassium phosphate buffer or the Tricine buffer on the amplification method of the present invention was examined. The composition of the reaction mixture was as described above in for a case where pUC19-249 was used as a template, except that a potassium phosphate buffer at a final concentration of 20-50 mM or a Tricine buffer at a final concentration of 22-46 mM was used. Reaction conditions and confirmation of amplification were as described above in As a result, an amplified fragment of interest 109 was obtained when the potassium phosphate buffer at a final concentration ranging from 20 to 50 mM or the Tricine buffer at a final concentration ranging from 22 to 46 mM was used.
Examination of concentration of Bca BEST DNA polymerase The effect of the concentration of Bca BEST DNA polymerase on the amplification method of the present invention was examined. The composition of the reaction mixture was as described above in for a case where pUC19-249 was used as a template, except that a potassium phosphate buffer system or a Tricine buffer system and Bca BEST DNA polymerase at a concentration within.a range of 1- 22 U/50 pl reaction volume was used. Reaction conditions and confirmation of amplification were as described above in As a result, an amplified fragment of interest was obtained when Bca BEST DNA polymerase was used at a concentration within a range of 1-22 U/50 il.
Example 6 Comparison with the PCR method The amplification method of the present invention was compared with the PCR method. Ones in which a DNA fragment of about 150 bp or about 250 bp is inserted into a 110 multi-cloning site in the pUC19 plasmid DNA were used as templates. The templates were prepared as follows.
pUC19 upper 150 primer, pUC19 upper 249 primer and pUC19 lower NN primer, which have sequences as shown in SEQ ID NOS:10, 11 and 6 of the Sequence Listing, respectively, were used to conduct a PCR reaction using 100 pg of the pUC19 plasmid DNA as a template. An amplified fragment of about 150 bp was obtained by using a combination of the pUC19 upper 150 primer and the pUC19 lower NN primer. An amplified fragment of about 250 bp was obtained by using a combination of the pUC19 upper 249 primer and the pUC19 lower NN primer. Each of these amplified fragments was purified using Microcon-100, bluntended using DNA blunting kit (Takara Shuzo), and then subcloned into a HincII site in the pUC19 plasmid.
Plasmids into which one of the amplified fragments is inserted were used to transform E. coli JM109. The resulting transformants were cultivated and plasmids with inserted DNA were purified from the cells using QIAGEN plasmid mini kit (Qiagen). The plasmids with inserted DNA were used as templates.
The sequences of the primers used in this Example are shown in SEQ ID NOS:18 and 19 of the Sequence Listing.
Primers in which the first to third bases from the 3'terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides were used for the 111 amplification method of the present invention. The composition of the reaction mixture was as follows.
27 mM phosphate buffer (pH 0.01% bovine serum albumin (BSA), 5% DMSO, 1 mM each of dNTPs, 8 mM magnesium acetate, 60 pmol each of the primers, 1 ng of the DNA as the template and sterile distilled water to a reaction volume of 48 il.
The reaction mixture was heat-denatured at 98°C for 1 minute, and then cooled to 55°C. 5.5 U of Bca BEST DNA polymerase and 60 U of E. coli RNase H were added thereto, and the mixture was incubated at 55°C for minutes. Thereafter, the mixture .was heated at 90°C for 2 minutes to inactivate the enzymes. 3 pl of the reaction mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 4% NuSieve 3:1 agarose (Takara Shuzo) gel.
On the other hand, amplification using the PCR method was conducted as a control. PCR Amplification kit (Takara Shuzo), 10 pmol each of primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:18 or 19 of the Sequence Listing without a ribonucleotide, 1 ng of the DNA as the template and sterile distilled water to a reaction volume of 50 pl were used for the reaction. The reaction conditions were cycles of 94'C for 30 seconds, 55°C for 30 seconds and 72°C for 40 seconds. After the completion of the reaction, 3 pl of the reaction mixture was subjected to 112 electrophoresis on 4% NuSieve 3:1 agarose (Takara Shuzo) gel.
As a result, more amount of a fragment of interest was amplified from each of the plasmids having an insert of 150 bp or 249 bp as a template in the amplification method of the present invention as compared with the PCR method. 20 Vl of the reaction mixture was purified using Microcon-100, and the amount of the amplification product was quantified using Beckman DU-640 spectrophotometer (Beckman) in order to express numerically the amount of the amplification product. The amount of the .fragment amplified from the plasmid having an insert of 150 bp as the template in the amplification method of the present invention was confirmed to be about 60-fold higher than that in the PCR method. The amount of the fragment amplified from the plasmid having an insert of 250 bp as the template in the amplification method of the present invention was confirmed to be about 40-fold higher than that in the PCR methods. Based on. these results, it was confirmed that the method of the present invention can be more preferably used for making a DNA chip, for which a large amount of a DNA fragment is required, as compared with the conventional PCR method.
Example 7 113 Preparation of RNA probe A method for detecting an amplified fragment obtained by the amplification method of the present invention was examined. A probe for detection composed of ribonucleotides in which two different fluorescent substances are attached to the ribonucleotides on both ends of the probe was prepared. The RNA probe for detection was synthesized using a DNA synthesizer (Applied Biosystems).
The nucleotide sequence of the probe is shown in SEQ ID NO:20 of the Sequence Listing. 6-FAM (Glen Research) and TAMRA (Glen Research) were used as fluorescent substances to label the probe at the 5'-terminus and the 3'-terminus, respectively.
Amplification reaction and detection 0.1 or 1 ng of the pUC19 DNA was used as a template. pUC19 upper 150 primer and pUC19 lower 542 primer having sequences as shown in SEQ ID NOS:10 and 8 of the Sequence Listing, respectively, in which the first and second bases from the 3'-terminus of the primer are replaced by ribonucleotides were used as primers.
The composition of the. reaction mixture was as follows.
27 mM phosphate buffer (pH 0.01% BSA, DMSO, 1 mM each of dNTPs, 8 mM magnesium acetate, 60 pmol each of the primers, 0.1 or 1 ng of the DNA as the template, 114 0.1 pg of the RNA probe and sterile distilled water to a reaction volume of 48 pl. One without the DNA as the template was also prepared as a control.
The reaction mixture was heat-denatured at 98°C for 1 minute, and then cooled to 55°C. 22 U of Bca BEST DNA polymerase or sterile water, and 60 U of E. coli RNase H were added thereto, and the mixture was incubated at for 60 minutes. Thereafter, 5 pl of 10% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS; Nacalai Tesque) was added to the mixture to inactivate the enzymes. 50 pl of the reaction mixture was diluted with an equal volume of sterile water and transferred to a microplate. An image analyzer FM BIO II Multi-View (Takara Shuzo) was used for detection at an excitation wavelength of 505 nm.
As a result, no fluorescent signal was detected using either of the templates when Bca BEST DNA polymerase was not added. Also, no fluorescent signal was detected for the reaction mixture containing Bca BEST DNA polymerase when the DNA as the template was not added. On the other hand, a fluorescent signal was detected when either 0.1 or 1 ng of the DNA as the template was added. An amplified fragment of about 190 bp of interest was also observed by electrophoresis on 3% agarose gel containing 0.00003% ethiduim bromide only when 0.1 or 1 ng of the DNA as the template was added in the presence of Bca BEST DNA 115 polymerase. That is, the same results were obtained by the detection method using an RNA probe and the conventional electrophoretic detection method. Thus, a method for detecting an amplified fragment obtained by the amplification method of the present invention using an RNA probe was established.
Example 8 Use of a primer composed of deoxyribonucleotides as one of the two primers in the method of the present invention was examined. MRlN3 (30) having a sequence as shown in SEQ.ID NO:19 of the Sequence Listing and M4 primer (Takara Shuzo) having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:58 of the Sequence Listing were used as primers. In the MRIN3 primer, the first to third bases from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides. The composition of the reaction mixture was as follows.
27 mM phosphate buffer (pH 0.01% bovine serum albumin (BSA), 5% DMSO, 1 mM each of dNTPs, 8 mM magnesium acetate, 30 pmol each of the primers, 1 ng of the DNA as the template and sterile distilled water to a reaction volume of 24 Il.
The reaction mixture was heat-denatured at 98°C for 2 minutes, and then cooled to 55°C. 11 U of Bca BEST DNA polymerase and 30 U of E. coli RNase H were added 116 thereto to make the reaction volume to 25 pl. The reaction mixture was incubated at 55°C for 60 minutes. Thereafter, the mixture was heated at 90°C for 2 minutes to inactivate the enzymes. 5 1l of the reaction mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 4% NuSieve 3:1 agarose gel. As a result, an amplified fragment of interest was observed.
Example 9 The method of the present invention was used to detect hemorrhagic E. coli 0-157.
Sequences of the primers used in this Example are shown in SEQ ID NOS:21-24 of the Sequence Listing. A combination of primers having a sequence of SEQ ID NO:21 or 22, and a combination of primers having a sequence of SEQ ID NO:23 or 24 were constructed for detecting a sequence encoding vero toxin 1 or vero toxin 2 of 0-157 according to the description of Rinsho To Biseibutsu (Clinical Microbiology), 18(4):507-513 (1991). Primers in which the first to third bases from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides were used for the amplification method of the present invention. A heat-extract prepared by harvesting a culture of hemorrhagic E. coli 0-157 (ATCC accession no. 43895), suspending it in sterile water at an appropriate cell density and treating it at 98°C for minutes was used as a template. The composition of the 117 reaction mixture was as follows.
27 mM phosphate buffer (pH 0.01% bovine serum albumin (BSA), 5% DMSO, 1 mM each of dNTPs, 8 mM magnesium acetate, 60 pmol each of the primers, the DNA as the template (the heat-extract) corresponding to 104-106 cells and sterile distilled water to a reaction volume of 48 pl.
The reaction mixture was heat-denatured at 98°C for 1 minute, and then cooled to 55°C. 5.5 U of Bca BEST DNA polymerase and 60 U of E. coli RNase H were added thereto. The reaction mixture was incubated at 55°C for minutes. Thereafter, the mixture was heated at 90°C for 2 minutes to inactivate the enzymes. 3 il of the reaction mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 4% NuSieve 3:1 agarose (Takara Shuzo) gel.
As a result, 0-157 vero toxin 1 and 2 could be detected using either one of the primer pairs and the DNA as the template corresponding to 10' cells, confirming that the method of the present invention can be utilized as a method for detecting a virulent bacterium.
Example Amplification of a long-chain DNA fragment by the method of the present invention was examined. A doublestranded DNA as a template was prepared as follows. First, 118 a library was constructed from mRNA derived from a normal gastric tissue using Uni-ZAP XR vector (Stratagene) according to a conventional method. The library was screened to select clones having an insert of about 2.1 kbp or about 4.3 kbp. The clones were used to obtain pBluescript SK phage vectors by in vitro excision.
Amplified fragments of about 2.2 kbp and about 4.4 kbp were obtained using the plasmids as templates, MCR-F primer and MCR-R primer having sequences as shown in SEQ ID NOS:25 and 26 of the Sequence Listing, respectively, and PCR Amplification kit (Takara Shuzo). These PCR fragments were used as templates for the amplification method *of the present invention. MF2N3 (24) primer and MRlN3 (24) primer having sequences as shown in SEQ ID NOS:27 and 28 of the Sequence Listing, respectively, in which the first to third bases from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides were used as primers. The composition of the reaction mixture was as follows.
28 mM phosphate buffer (pH 0.01% bovine serum albumin (BSA), 1% DMSO, 0.5 mM each of dNTPs, 4 mM magnesium acetate, 30 pmol each of the primers, 0.2 mM putrescine and sterile distilled water to 24.25 pl. The reaction mixture was treated at 92'C for 2 minutes, and then cooled to 55°C. 30 U of RNase H and 5.5 U of Bca BEST DNA polymerase were added thereto to make the reaction 119 volume to 25 pl. The reaction mixture was incubated for 1 hour. After the completion of the reaction, the mixture was cooled at 4°C, and 2.5 pl of a 0.5 M EDTA solution added thereto to terminate the reaction. 5 pl of the mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 1% agarose gel.
As a result, an amplified fragment of about 2.2 kbp or about 4.4 kbp was obtained by the method of the present invention, confirming that the method of the present invention can be used to amplify a long-chain DNA fragment.
Example 11 A DNA microarray onto which a X DNA fragment of about 400 bp amplified by the amplification method of the present invention and X DNA fragments of 300 bp and 1000 bp amplified by PCR were spotted was produced. The nucleotide sequence of the A DNA is available from GenBank accession nos. V00636, J02459, M17233 and X00906. The sequences of primers used in this Example are shown in SEQ ID .NOS:25-26 and 29-35 of the Sequence Listing. A reaction mixture for the amplification method of the present invention was prepared as follows.
34 mM Tricine-hydrochloride buffer (pH mM potassium chloride, 10 mM ammonium sulfate, 0.01% bovine serum albumin (BSA), 1% dimethyl sulfoxide, 4 mM magnesium 120 acetate, 0.5 mM each of dNTPs, 500 pmol each of the primers, 100 ng of the PCR amplification product as the template, 110 U of Bca BEST DNA polymerase and 300 U of cloned RNase H in a final reaction volume of 500 pl. The reaction mixture was mixed to homogeneity, incubated at 55'C for minutes, and then heated at 90°C for 2 minutes to inactivate the enzymes. This solution was used in the subsequent steps. The spotted DNA fragments were as follows.
1. Sample: A PCR amplification product (300 bp) obtained by using a X DNA as a template and a combination of primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:29 or of the Sequence Listing was subcloned into the pUC19 vector.
The subcloned product was then PCR-amplified using primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:25 or 26 of the Sequence Listing. The thus obtained product as a template and chimeric oligonucleotide primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:31 or 32 of the Sequence Listing, in which the first and second bases from the 3'-terminus of the primer are replaced by ribonucleotides, were used to amplify a product of about 400 bp by the amplification method of the present invention to obtain the Sample. Five DNA solutions, the reaction mixture at its original concentration or 8- or 16-fold dilutions of the reaction mixture with a carbonate buffer (a carbonate 121 buffer at a concentration of 50 mM were used for dilution in each case) were used for spotting.
2. Sample: The DNA fragment amplified in 1 above was treated with Microcon-100 (Takara Shuzo). Then, five DNA solutions were prepared by adjusting the concentrations to 0.125 pg/pl, 0.25 pg/pl, 0.5 pg/pl, 1.0 pg/pl and pg/pl with the 50 mM carbonate buffer.
3. Positive Control: A PCR amplification product (300 bp) obtained by using the h DNA as a template and a combination of primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:29 or 30 of the Sequence Listing was treated with Microcon-100. Then, five DNA solutions were prepared by adjusting the concentrations to 0.125 ig/il, 0.25 pg/pl, pg/ul, 1.0 pg/ul and 2.0 pg/pl with the 50 mM carbonate buffer.
4. Positive Control: A PCR amplification product (1000 bp) obtained by using the X DNA as a template and a combination of primers having a sequences as shown in SEQ ID NO:33 or 34 of the Sequence Listing was treated with Microcon-100. Then, four DNA solutions were prepared by adjusting the concentrations to 0.125 pg/pl, 0.25 pg/pl, pg/pl and 1.0 pg/pl with the 50 mM carbonate buffer.
Negative Control: A PCR amplification product (300 bp) obtained by using the X DNA as a template and a combination of primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID 122 NO:33 or 35 of the Sequence Listing was subcloned into the pUC19 vector. The subcloned product was then PCR-amplified using primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:25 or 26 of the Sequence Listing. The thus obtained product as a template and primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:31 or 32 of the Sequence Listing as primers were used to amplify a product of about 400 bp by the amplification method of the present invention to obtain the Negative Control. Five DNA solutions, the reaction mixture at its original concentration or 8- or 16-fold dilutions of the reaction mixture with a carbonate buffer (a carbonate buffer at a concentration of 50 mM were used for dilution in each case) were used for spotting.
6. Negative Control: The DNA fragment obtained in 5 above was treated with Microcon-100. Then, five DNA solutions were prepared by adjusting the concentrations to 0.125 pg/pl, 0.25 pg/l1, 0.5 pg/pl, 1.0 pg/ul and 2.0 pg/pl with the 50 mM carbonate buffer.
The respective DNA solutions thus prepared were spotted onto a slide glass to which amino groups had been introduced (Matsunami Glass) using an equipment for making DNA chips (Genetic Microsystems and were immobilized using UV irradiation. The slide was washed with 0.2% SDS followed by distilled water, dried, and then used as a DNA array.
123 A PCR amplification product (300 bp) obtained by using a combination of primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:29 or 30 of the Sequence Listing was labeled with Cy5 using Label IT Cy5" Labeling Kit (Takara Shuzo) for use as a probe. Hybridization was carried out using a prehybridization solution and a hybridization solution as described in the instructions attached to IntelliGene (Takara Shuzo). First, the DNA array was subjected to prehybridization at room temperature for 2 hours. The hybridization solution containing the denatured probe was dripped onto the DNA array. A cover glass was mounted thereon. The sides of the cover glass were sealed with a film. The sealed DNA array was incubated at for 13 hours. After the cover glass was removed, the DNA array was washed in 2 x SSC at 65°C for 5 minutes, in a solution containing 0.2 x SSC and 0.1% SDS at 650°C for minutes, and finally in 0.2 x SSC at room temperature for minutes, and air-dried. The DNA array was then subjected to a microarray scanner (GMS) to analyze the fluorescent signals from the respective spots.
As a result, a fluorescent signal was observed at each of the positions onto which fragments amplified by the PCR method (the Positive Controls as described above in 3 and 4) and the method of the present invention (the Samples as described above in 1 and 2) were spotted. The 124 intensities of the signals were as follows: the Sample 2 the Positive Control 4 the Sample 1 the Positive Control 3. On the other hand, no signal was observed at all for the Negative Controls 5 and 6. From these results, it was confirmed that an unpurified or purified DNA fragment amplified by the method of the present invention can be preferably used as a DNA fragment to be immobilized to make a DNA chip.
Example 12 The designing of a primer used in the method of the present invention in which a PCR-amplified fragment was used as a template was examined. First, primers having one of sequences as shown in SEQ ID NOS:36-41 of the Sequence Listing were synthesized according to a conventional method. The structures of the respective primers are as follows.
Ri-Si primer: From the 5'-terminus, 7 bases of a spacer sequence, 17 bases of a M13RV sequence (or RV sequence; the nucleotide sequence of M13RV primer (Takara Shuzo)) and 20 bases of a sense primer sequence for X DNAspecific PCR; (ii) Rl-A3 primer: From the 5'-terminus, 7 bases of a spacer sequence, 17 bases of the M13RV sequence and bases of an antisense primer sequence for X DNA-specific 125
PCR;
(iii) R2-S1 primer: From the 5'-terminus, bases of a spacer sequence, 17 bases of the M13RV sequence and 20 bases of a sense primer sequence for A DNA-specific
PCR;
(iv) R2-A3 primer: From the 5'-terminus, 25 bases of a spacer sequence, 17 bases of the M13RV sequence and bases of an antisense primer sequence for X DNA-specific
PCR;
R3-S1 primer: From the 5'-terminus, 58 bases of a spacer sequence, 17 bases of the M13RV sequence and bases of a sense primer sequence for A DNA-specific PCR; and (vi) R3-A3 primer: From the 5'-terminus, 58 bases of a spacer sequence, 17 bases of the M13RV sequence and bases of an antisense primer sequence for A DNA-specific
PCR.
M13RV 20mer has a sequence of a total of 20 bases consisting of 17 bases of the M13RV sequence and 3 .bases at the 5'-terminus. Therefore, when M13RV 20 mer is used in the method of the present invention, the lengths of the spacer sequences in the above-mentioned primers become 4 bases, 22 bases and 55 bases, respectively. Primers without a spacer sequence were also made as controls for the above-mentioned primers.
126 For example, when the primer pair, Ri-Si primer/Rl-A3 primer, is used, an amplified fragment of 348 bp is obtained. 7 bases on both ends of the amplified fragment correspond to the spacer portions. The RV sequences are located inside the spacer portions. The X DNA sequences are located inside the RV sequences.
Similarly, when the primer pair, R2-S1 primer/R2- A3 primer, is used, an amplified fragment of 384 bp in which 25 bases on both ends of the amplified fragment correspond to the spacer portions is obtained. In addition, when the primer pair, R3-S1 primer/R3-A3 primer, is used, an amplified fragment of 450 bp in which. 58 bases on both ends of the amplified fragment correspond to the spacer portions is obtained. On the other hand, a fragment amplified using control primers has no spacer portion.
These PCR-amplified fragments were used as templates for the following examination.
One of two primers, M13RV-2N 17mer primer or M13RV-2N 20mer having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NOS:42 or 43 of the Sequence Listing was used in this Example. In the primers, the first and second bases from the 3'terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides. The reaction was carried out as follows. 5 pl of a mixture of 20 iM of the primer, about 20 ng of the template and 0.01% propylenediamine was denatured at 98°C for 2 minutes, and 127 then cooled to 550°C. Thereafter, 34 mM Tricine buffer (pH 10 mM potassium chloride, 10 mM ammonium sulfate, 0.01% BSA, 1% DMSO, 4 mM magnesium acetate, 0.5 mM each of dNTPs, 1 U of Bca BEST DNA polymerase and 15 U of RNase H were added thereto to make the final reaction volume to pl. The reaction mixture was incubated at 55'C for 1 hour.
After the completion of the reaction, the mixture was cooled to 4 0 C, and then 2.5 ul of a 0.5 M EDTA solution was added thereto to terminate the reaction. 3 pl of the reaction mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 3% NuSieve 3:1 agarose (Takara Shuzo) gel. As a result, when M13RV-2N 17mer -was used, increase in amplification efficiency was observed depending on the length of the spacer sequence in the following order: 25mer 7mer 58mer no spacer sequence. When M13RV-2N 20mer was used, increase in amplification efficiency was observed depending on the length of the spacer sequence in the following order: 22mer 4mer 55mer no spacer sequence.
Furthermore, when the M13RV sequences in the primers described above in to (vi) were replaced by M13M4 sequences, a similar tendency was observed .for the relationship between the spacer sequence and the amplification efficiency. Thus, it was confirmed that, when a linear DNA fragment such as a PCR-amplified fragment is used as a template, the designing of primers used in the 128 method of the present invention to generate a spacer sequence (portion) leads to an increased amplification efficiency.
Amplification of a template having a high GC content in the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence using an elevated reaction temperature was examined. First, primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:44 or 45 of the Sequence Listing for PCR amplification of a 307-bp region (GC content: 62.5%) of CDC2-related protein kinase PISS LRE gene (GenBank accession no. AA789328) were produced. In addition, primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:46 or 47 of the Sequence Listing for PCR amplification of a 284-bp region (GC content: 61.3%) of Type II cytoskeltal 1 keratin gene (GenBank accession no.
AA706022) were produced. PCR amplification was carried out using these primers and commercially available DNA fragments (Research Genetics) as templates. The respective PCR-amplified fragments obtained by using the abovementioned primer pairs have spacer sequences and the M13RV sequences on both ends. The fragments were used as templates for the present invention.
M13RV-2N 17mer primer having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:42 of the Sequence Listing or M13RV-2N primer having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:43 of the Sequence Listing was used in this Example. In the primers, 129 the first and second bases from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides. The reaction was carried out as follows. 10 11 of a mixture of 100 pmol of the primer, ng of the template and 0.01% propylenediamine was denatured at 98°C for 2 minutes, and then cooled to 550°C or Thereafter, 34 mM Tricine buffer (pH 10 mM KCl, mM ammonium sulfate, 0.01% BSA, 1% DMSO, 4 mM magnesium acetate, 0.5 mM each of dNTPs, 11 U of Bca BEST DNA polymerase and 30 U of RNase H were added thereto to make the final reaction volume to 50 Pl. The reaction mixture was incubated at 55°C or 60°C for 1 hour. After the completion of the reaction, the mixture was cooled to 4 0
C.
3 pl of the reaction mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 3% agarose gel. The results are shown in Table 1 below.
Table 1 Gene and results of amplification Reaction Primers CDC2-related Type .I temperature used cytoskeltal M13RV-2N 17mer M13RV-2N 20mer M13RV-2N 17mer M13RV-2N 20mer to The degree of amplification was scored in four grades.
No amplification was observed.
130 As shown in Table 1, the region of interest was efficiently amplified even if a template having a high GC content was used. This amplification was accomplished by elevating the reaction temperature (from 55 0 C to 60 0 C) and by using a primer having a higher Tm value as compared with an optimal primer for a reaction at 55 0 C when the reaction was carried at The relationship between the length of an amplified fragment and the amount of the amplification product in the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence under high reaction temperature conditions was examined.
First, a pair of primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:48 or 49 of the Sequence Listing for amplifying a 800-bp region of the lambda DNA (Takara Shuzo) and a pair of primers having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:50 or 51 of the Sequence Listing for amplifying a 400-bp region of the lambda DNA were synthesized according to a conventional method. PCR was conducted using one of these primer pairs and the X DNA as a template to obtain an amplified fragment.
An amplified fragment of about 1.1 kbp was also prepared using the pUC19-911 plasmid as described in Example 5 (1) as a template and MF2 (24) primer and MR1 (24) primer, which have sequences as shown in SEQ ID NOS:16 and 17 of the Sequence Listing, respectively. The PCR-amplified 131 fragments obtained by using the above-mentioned primer pairs have spacer sequences and the M13RV or M4 sequences on both ends. These fragments were used as templates for the present invention.
M13RV-2N 17mer primer having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:42 of the Sequence Listing or M13RV-2N primer having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:43 of the Sequence Listing was used as a primer in this Example. In the primers, the first and second bases from the 3'terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides. A combination of M13M4-3N 20mer primer having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID of the Sequence Listing and M13RV-3N 20mer primer having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:43 of the Sequence Listing, and a combination of M13M4-3N 24mer primer and M13RV-3N 24mer primer having sequences as shown in SEQ ID NO:56 and 57 of the Sequence Listing, respectively, were used for amplifying a region of about 1 kbp. In the primers, the first to third bases from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides. The reaction was carried out as follows. 10 p1 of a mixture of 10 pmol of the primer, about 20 ng of the template and 0.01% propylenediamine was denatured at 98°C for 2 minutes, and then cooled to 55°C or Thereafter, 34 mM Tricine buffer (pH 10 mM potassium chloride, 10 mM ammonium sulfate, 0.01% BSA, 1% DMSO, 4 mM magnesium acetate, 0.5 mM each of dNTPs, 11 U of 132 Bca BEST DNA polymerase and 30 U of RNase H were added thereto to make the final reaction volume to 50 pl. The reaction mixture was incubated at 55"C or 60°C for 1 hour.
After the completion of the reaction, the mixture was cooled to 4'C, and then 5 pl of a 0.5 M EDTA solution was added thereto to terminate the reaction. 3 pl of the reaction mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 3% NuSieve 3:1 agarose (Takara Shuzo) gel. The results are shown in Tables 2 and 3 below.
Table 2 Length of amplified fragment and results Reaction Primers 400 bp 800 bp temperature used M13RV-2N 17mer M13RV-2N 20mer M13RV-2N 17mer M13RV-2N 20mer to The degree of amplification was scored in four grades.
No amplification was observed.
As shown in Table 2, fragments for regions of 400 bp and 800 bp were efficiently amplified by making the length of the primer for amplification from 17mer to and by elevating the reaction temperature from 55°C to 133 Table 3 Reaction Primers Length of amplified temperature used fragment and results 1034bp M13RV-3N 20mer M13M4-3N 20mer M13RV-3N 24mer M13M4-3N 24mer M13RV-3N 20mer M13M4-3N 20mer M13RV-3N 24mer M13M4-3N 24mer to The degree of amplification was scored in four grades.
No amplification was observed.
Furthermore, as shown in Table3, a fragment for a region of about 1 kbp was. efficiently amplified by making the length of the primer for amplification from 20mer to 24mer and by elevating the reaction temperature from to 65°C. Additionally, similar results were obtained for amplification of a long-chain DNA fragment as described in Example 10 by using longer primers and an elevated reaction temperature. Increase in amplification efficiency was observed when a region of about 2 kbp or longer was amplified.
Example 13 Use of a heat-resistant DNA polymerase other than Bca BEST DNA polymerase in the method of the present invention was examined. Bst DNA polymerase (New England Biolabs) was used as a heat-resistant DNA polymerase. A 134 pair of primers, 5'-ID primer and 3'-ID primer having sequences as shown in SEQ ID NOS:52 and 53 of the Sequence Listing, respectively, were synthesized according to a conventional method. PCR was carried out using the primer pair and a commercially available DNA fragment for cyclin A gene (Research Genetics) as a template, resulting in an amplified fragment of about 300 bp. The PCR-amplified fragment obtained by using the primer pair has the M13RV sequences on both ends. The fragment was used as a template for the present invention.
M13RV-2N 17mer primer having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:42 of the Sequence Listing was used as a primer in this Example. In the primer, the first and second bases from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides. The reaction was carried out as follows.
pl of a mixture of 20 iM of the primer, about 20 ng of the template and 0.01% propylenediamine was denatured at 98'C for 2 minutes, and then cooled to 55'C. Thereafter, 34 mM Tricine buffer (pH 10. mM potassium chloride, 10 mM ammonium sulfate, 0.01% BSA, 1% DMSO, 4 mM magnesium acetate, 0.5 mM each of dNTPs, 4, 8, 12 or 16 U of Bst DNA polymerase and 30 U of RNase H were added thereto to make the final reaction volume to 50 pl. As a control, a reaction mixture having a composition identical with the above-mentioned one was prepared, except that 11 U of Bca BEST DNA polymerase was used. The reaction mixture was incubated at 55°C for 1 hour. After the completion of the reaction, the mixture was cooled to 4'C, and then 5 pl of a M EDTA solution was added thereto to terminate the reaction. 3 pl of the reaction mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 3% NuSieve 3:1 agarose (Takara Shuzo) gel. As a result, an amplified fragment of interest was obtained using each of the various units of Bst DNA polymerase. Thus, it was confirmed that heat-resistant DNA polymerases can be preferably used in the method of the present invention.
Use of a mesophilic DNA polymerase in the method of the present invention was examined. 5'-3'exo activity Klenow fragment (Takara Shuzo) was used as a mesophilic DNA polymerase. The DNA prepared in above was used a template DNA for the method of the present invention.
M13RV-2N 16mer primer having a sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:54 of the Sequence Listing was used as a primer in this Example. In the primer, the first and second bases from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides. The reaction was carried out as follows.
pl of a mixture of 20 pM of the primer, about 20 ng of the template and 0.01% propylenediamine was denatured at 98°C for 2 minutes, and then cooled to 40'C. Thereafter, 34 136 mM Tricine buffer (pH 10 mM potassium chloride, 10 mM ammonium sulfate, 0.01% BSA, 1% DMSO, 4 mM magnesium acetate, 0.5 mM each of dNTPs, 0, 2, 4, 6 or 8 U of Klenow fragment and 30 U of RNase H were added thereto to make the final reaction volume to 50 pl. The reaction mixture was incubated at 40°C for 1 hour. After the completion of the reaction, the mixture was cooled to 4°C, and then 5 pl of a M EDTA solution was added thereto to terminate the reaction. 3 pi of the reaction mixture was subjected to electrophoresis on 3% NuSieve 3:1 agarose (Takara Shuzo) gel. As a result, an amplified fragment of interest was obtained in cases where the various units of Klenow fragment were used excluding the case where no Klenow fragment was added. Thus, it was confirmed that mesophilic DNA polymerases can be preferably used in the method of the present invention.
Example 14 Chimeric oligonucleotide primers to be used in the method of the present invention were examined. A DNA as a template and primers were synthesized as described in Example 1 The structures of the primers used in this Examples are described below in detail: Primer Pair 1: A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:2 or 3 of the 137 Sequence Listing and wholly composed of deoxyribonucleotides; Primer Pair 2: A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:59 or 60 of the Sequence Listing in which the sixth and seventh deoxyribonucleotides from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides; Primer Pair 3: A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in .SEQ ID NO:61 or 62 of the Sequence Listing in which the fifth and sixth deoxyribonucleotides from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides; Primer Pair 4: A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:63 or 64 of the Sequence Listing in which the fourth and fifth deoxyribonucleotides from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides; Primer Pair 5: A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:65 or 66 of the Sequence Listing in which the third and fourth deoxyribonucleotides from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides; Primer Pair 6: A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:67 or 68 of the Sequence Listing in which the second and third 138 deoxyribonucleotides from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides; Primer Pair 7: A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:2 or 3 of the Sequence Listing in which the first and second deoxyribonucleotides from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides; and Primer Pair 8: A combination of primers having a nucleotide sequence as shown in SEQ ID NO:67 or 68 of the Sequence Listing in which the second and third deoxyribonucleotides from the 3'-terminus are replaced by ribonucleotides and the phosphate bond on the side of the third ribonucleotide from the 3'-terminus is replaced by a phosphorothioate bond.
Amplification conditions and detection method were as described in Example 1 and As a result, an amplified fragment having a length of interest was observed for each of the Primer Pairs 2-8. For the Primer Pairs 2-7, the amount of the amplification product increased as the number of deoxyribonucleotides at the 3'terminus decreased. Particularly, the .most abundant amplification product was observed for the Primer Pair 7 having no deoxyribonucleotide at the 3'-terminus. On the other hand, no amplified fragment was observed for the Primer Pair 1. Furthermore, the fact that amplified 139 fragments of interest.were observed for both of the Primer Pairs 6 and 8 confirms that both of a modified ribonucleotide and a unmodified ribonucleotide can be preferably used as a ribonucleotide contained in a primer in the method of the present invention.
Industrial Applicability The present invention provides a convenient and efficient method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence characterized in that a DNA synthesis reaction is carried out in the presence of a chimeric oligonucleotide primer.
Th present invention provides a method for supplying an amplified DNA fragment in large quantities. An efficient method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence is also provided by combining the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence of the present invention with another nucleic acid amplification method. Furthermore, the present invention provides a method for detecting a nucleotide sequence for detecting or quantifying a microorganism such as a virus, a bacterium, a fungus and a yeast, as well as a method for real-time detection of the amplified DNA fragment obtained by the method of the present invention. In addition, present invention provides a large-scale gene sequencing method.
140 Sequence Listing Free Text SEQ ID NO:1: Synthetic DNA corresponding to a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence used as a template.
SEQ ID NO:2: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:3: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:4: Designed oligonucleotide used as a probe for detecting an amplified portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:5: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as pUC19 upper NN to amplify a. portion of plasmid pUC19.
SEQ ID NO:6: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as pUC19 lower NN to amplify a portion of plasmid pUC19.
SEQ ID NO:7: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of plasmid pUC19.
SEQ ID NO:8: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as pUC19 lower 542 to amplify a portion of plasmid pUC19.
SEQ ID NO:9: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of plasmid pUC19.
SEQ ID NO:10: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as pUC19 upper 150 to amplify a portion of plasmid pUC19.
SEQ ID NO:11: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as pUC19 upper 249 to amplify a portion of plasmid pUC19.
SEQ ID NO:12: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:13: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of. human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:14: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:15: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:16: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as MF2N3 (24) to amplify a portion of plasmid pUC19-249 or plasmid pUC19-911.
SEQ ID NO:17: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as MRlN3 (24) to amplify a portion of plasmid pUC19-249 or plasmid pUC19-911.
142 SEQ ID NO:18: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of plasmid pUC19.
SEQ ID NO:19: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as MR1N3 to amplify a portion of plasmid pUC19.
SEQ ID NO:20: Synthetic RNA used as a probe for detecting an amplified portion of plasmid pUC19.
SEQ ID NO:21: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of vero toxin 1-encoding sequence from hemorrhagic Escherichia coli 0-157.
SEQ ID N0:22: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of vero toxin 1-encoding sequence from hemorrhagic Escherichia coli 0-157.
SEQ ID N0:23: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of vero toxin 2-encoding sequence from hemorrhagic Escherichia coli 0-157.
SEQ ID N0:24: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of vero toxin 2 -encoding sequence from hemorrhagic Escherichia coli 0-157.
SEQ ID NO:25: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as MCR-F to amplify a long DNA fragment.
SEQ ID N0:26: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as MCR-R to amplify a long DNA fragment.
SEQ ID NO:27: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as MF2N3 (24) to amplify a long DNA fragment.
SEQ ID NO:28: Designed oligonucleotide primer 143 designated as MR1N3 (24) to amplify a long DNA fragment.
SEQ ID N0O:29: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:30: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:31: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:32: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:33: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:34: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:35: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:36: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as R1-S1 to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:37: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as R1-A3 to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:38: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as R2-Sl to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:39: Designed oligonucleotide primer 144 designated as R2-A3 to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:40: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as R3-S1 to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:41: .Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as R3-A3 to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:42: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as M13RV-2N 17mer.
SEQ ID NO:43: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as M13RV-2N SEQ ID NO:44: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of CDC2-related protein kinase PISSLRE gene.
SEQ ID NO:45: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of CDC2-related protein kinase PISSLRE gene.
SEQ ID NO:46: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of Type II cytoskeltal 11 keratin gene.
SEQ ID NO:47: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of Type II cytoskeltal 11 keratin gene.
SEQ ID NO:48: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:49: Designed oligonucleotide primer to 145 amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:50: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.' SEQ ID NO:51: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of bacteriophage lambda DNA.
SEQ ID NO:52: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as 5'ID to amplify a portion of cyclin A DNA.
SEQ ID NO:53: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as 3'ID to amplify a portion of cyclin A DNA.
SEQ ID NO:54: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as M13RV-2N 16mer.
SEQ ID NO:55: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as M13M4-3N 16mer.
SEQ ID NO:56: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as M13M4-3N 24mer.
SEQ ID NO:57: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as M13RV-3N 24mer.
SEQ ID NO:58: Designed oligonucleotide primer designated as M13M4 17mer.
SEQ ID NO:59: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:60: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
146 SEQ ID NO:61: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:62: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:63: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:64: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:65: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:66: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:67: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
SEQ ID NO:68: Designed oligonucleotide primer to amplify a portion of human transferrin receptor-encoding sequence.
146a In the claims which follow and in the preceding description of the invention, except where the context requires otherwise due to express language or necessary implication, the word "comprise" or variations such as "comprises" or "comprising" is used in an inclusive sense, i.e. to specify the presence of the stated features but not to preclude the presence or addition or further features in various embodiments of the invention.
It is to be understood that a reference herein to a prior art publication does not constitute an admission that the publication forms a part of the common general knowledge in the art in Australia, or any other country.

Claims (6)

1. A composition when used for the method for amplifying a nucleotide sequence or for producing a 00 nucleic acid in large quantities, or the method for detecting a nucleic acid in a sample, characterized in Sthat the method comprises: S(i) preparing a reaction mixture by mixing a nucleic (C1 acid as a template, a deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate, a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity, at least one primer and an endonuclease that cleaves an extended strand generated from the primer, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is substantially complementary to the base sequence of the nucleic acid as the template and contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer; and (ii) incubating the reaction mixture for a sufficient time to generate a reaction product, wherein said composition comprises; DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity; an endonuclease; and a buffer for a strand displacement reaction.
2. The composition according to claim 1, which comprises a DNA polymerase selected from the group S- 148 c-i consisting of Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I from 0 Escherichia coli, Bst DNA polymerase lacking exonuclease from Bacillus stearothermophilus and Bca DNA polymerase lacking exonuclease from Bacillus caldotenax as the DNA polymerase.
3. The composition according to claim 1, which comprises RNase H as the endonuclease.
4. A method for detecting a mutation of a target nucleic acid, characterized in that the method comprises: preparing a reaction mixture by mixing a nucleic acid as a template, a deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate, a DNA polymerase having a strand displacement activity, at least one primer for detecting a mutation of a target nucleic acid and an endonuclease that cleaves an extended strand generated from the primer, wherein the primer is a chimeric oligonucleotide primer that is substantially complementary to the base sequence of the nucleic acid as the template and contains a deoxyribonucleotide and a ribonucleotide, the ribonucleotide being positioned at the 3'-terminus or on the 3'-terminal side of the primer; and (ii) incubating the reaction mixture for a sufficient time to generate a reaction product.
5. A composition according to claim 1 substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to any one of the Examples.
6. A method according to claim 4 substantially as 149 hereinbefore described with reference to any one of the o Examples. 0 CO 0©
AU2004205118A 1999-03-19 2004-08-18 Method for amplifying nucleic acid sequence Ceased AU2004205118B2 (en)

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Citations (1)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0747479A1 (en) * 1995-06-07 1996-12-11 Gen-Probe Incorporated Template and primer based synthesis of enzymatically cleavable oligonucleotides

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0747479A1 (en) * 1995-06-07 1996-12-11 Gen-Probe Incorporated Template and primer based synthesis of enzymatically cleavable oligonucleotides

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Title
WALKER GT & LIN CP, (1996) Clinical Chemistry Vol 42(10), p 1604-1608 *
WALKER GT et al, (1994) Nucleic Acids Research Vol 22(13), p 2670-2677 *

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