SUMMARY
UCLA researchers in the department of Bioengineering have developed a novel method for quantitative analysis of DNA amplification products.
BACKGROUND
The market for DNA-based infectious disease diagnostics is projected to rise to over $1.5 billion by 2021. While PCR is the industry standard for DNA amplification, novel and simple techniques have been developed such as loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP), among others. Standard technologies then use fluorescent dyes to detect the presence of DNA, but these often suffer from low thermal and light stability, and may interfere with the amplification reaction. Improved DNA detection mechanisms, in combination with these previously-described amplification techniques, would offer significant advances in DNA detection technology.
INNOVATION
UCLA researchers have developed a novel method of analyzing DNA amplification products bright-field microscopy. To analyze, loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) is carried out within droplets. After amplification, DNA and other salts form a precipitate within the droplet, which can be observed by conventional microscopy or cellphone camera. Images are then processed and the original DNA concentration calculated. No sequence-specific or intercalating probes are required, and no additional processing is required apart from LAMP.
APPLICATIONS
- Quantification of amplified DNA
- Disease diagnostics
ADVANTAGES
- Requires only nanoliters of material
- Can be imagined using conventional microscope or cell phone camera
- No fluorescent microscopy required
- 0.23 fM limit of detection
- Sensitivity >95% and specificity >98%
STATE OF DEVELOPMENT
The technique has been demonstrated and validated on a set of <17,000 images, with high sensitivity and specificity.