Tweezer PCR: A Highly Specific Method for Accurate Identification of Low-Abundance Mutations

Shanglin Li, Yin Gu, Zhi Geng, Kaiyi Li, Yawei Hu, Qiang Liu, Rongxin Fu, Peng Liu*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Somatic mutation is a valuable biomarker for tracking tumor progression and migration due to its distinctive feature in various tumors and its wide distribution throughout body fluids. However, accurately detecting somatic mutations from the abundant DNA of noncancerous origins remains a practical challenge in the clinic. Herein, we developed an ultraspecific method, called tweezer PCR, for detecting low-abundance mutations inspired by the design of DNA origami. The high specificity of tweezer PCR relies on a tweezer-shaped primer containing six basic functional units: a primer, a hairpin, a linker, a blocker, a spacer, and a toehold. After optimizing the structure of the tweezer-shaped primer and enhancing its specificity by adding additional Mg2+ and Na+, tweezer PCR distinguished as low as 20 copies of mutations from 2 million copies of wild-type templates per test. By testing synthesized plasmids and plasma samples gathered from nonsmall-cell lung cancer patients, tweezer PCR showed higher specificity and robustness for detecting low-copy-number mutations in contrast with digital droplet PCR. Additionally, the need for conventional instruments makes tweezer PCR a practically accessible method for testing low-abundance mutations. Because of its numerous advantages, we believe that tweezer PCR offers a precise, robust, and pragmatic tool for cancer screening, prognosis, and genotyping in the clinic.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)17679-17690
Number of pages12
JournalAnalytical Chemistry
Volume95
Issue number48
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Dec 2023

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