Micromachines (Apr 2024)

Low-Temperature and High-Efficiency Solid-Phase Amplification Based on Formamide

  • Jialing Huang,
  • Huan Li,
  • Fengfeng Shu,
  • Wenchao Zhou,
  • Yihui Wu,
  • Yue Wang,
  • Xiao Lv,
  • Ming Gao,
  • Zihan Song,
  • Shixun Zhao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/mi15050565
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 5
p. 565

Abstract

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The thermal stability of DNA immobilized on a solid surface is one of the factors that affects the efficiency of solid-phase amplification (SP-PCR). Although variable temperature amplification ensures high specificity of the reaction by precisely controlling temperature changes, excessively high temperatures during denaturation can negatively affect DNA stability. Formamide (FA) enables DNA denaturation at lower temperatures, showing potential for SP-PCR. Research on FA’s impacts on DNA microarrays is still limited, necessitating further optimization in exploring the characteristics of FA in SP-PCR according to particular application needs. We immobilized DNA on a chip using a crosslinker and generated DNA microarrays through bridge amplification based on FA denaturation on our automated reaction device. We optimized the denaturation and hybridization parameters of FA, achieving a maximum cluster density of 2.83 × 104 colonies/mm2. Compared to high-temperature denaturation, FA denaturation required a lower template concentration and milder reaction conditions and produced higher cluster density, demonstrating that FA effectively improves hybridization rates on surfaces. Regarding the immobilized DNA stability, the FA group exhibited a 45% loss of DNA, resulting in a 15% higher DNA retention rate compared to the high-temperature group, indicating that FA can better maintain DNA stability. Our study suggests that using FA improves the immobilized DNA stability and amplification efficiency in SP-PCR.

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