The Discovery of Rolling Circle Amplification and Rolling Circle Transcription

被引:271
作者
Mohsen, Michael G. [1 ]
Kool, Eric T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Stanford Univ, Dept Chem, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
IN-VITRO AMPLIFICATION; CIRCULAR OLIGONUCLEOTIDES; DNA-SYNTHESIS; MOLECULAR RECOGNITION; PADLOCK PROBES; NUCLEIC-ACIDS; RNA; POLYMERASE; REPLICATION; BINDING;
D O I
10.1021/acs.accounts.6b00417
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
CONSPECTUS: Nucleic acid amplification is a hugely important technology for biology and medicine. While the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) has been highly useful and effective, its reliance on heating and cooling cycles places some constraints on its utility. For example, the heating step of PCR can destroy biological molecules under investigation and heat/cool cycles are not applicable in living systems. Thus, isothermal approaches to DNA and RNA amplification are under widespread study. Perhaps the simplest of these are the rolling circle approaches, including rolling circle amplification (RCA) and rolling circle transcription (RCT). In this strategy, a very small circular oligonucleotide (e.g., 25-100 nucleotides in length) acts as a template for a DNA or an RNA polymerase, producing long repeating product strands that serve as amplified copies of the circle sequence. Here we describe the early developments and studies involving circular oligonucleotides that ultimately led to the burgeoning rolling circle technologies currently under development. This Account starts with our studies on the design of circular oligonucleotides as novel DNA- and RNA-binding motifs. We describe how we developed chemical and biochemical strategies for synthesis of well-defined circular oligonucleotides having defined sequence and open (unpaired) structure, and we outline the unusual ways in which circular DNAs can interact with other nucleic acids. We proceed next to the discovery of DNA and RNA polymerase activity on these very small cyclic DNAs. DNA polymerase "rolling, circle" activities were discovered concurrently in our laboratory and that of Andrew Fire. We describe the surprising efficiency of this process even on shockingly small circular DNAs, producing repeating DNAs thousands of nucleotides in length. RNA polymerase activity on circular oligonucleotides was first documented in our group in 1995; especially surprising in this case was the finding that the process occurs efficiently even without promoter sequences in the circle. We describe how one can encode cleavable sites into the product DNAs and RNAs from RCA/RCT, which can then be resolved into large quantities of almost pure oligonucleotides. Our Account then proceeds with a summary describing a broad variety of tools and methods built in many laboratories around the rolling circle concept. Among the important developments are the discovery of highly efficient DNA polymerases for RCA; the invention of exponential ("hyperbranched") RCA amplification made possible by use of a second primer; the development of the "padlock" process for detection of nucleic acids and proteins coupled with RCA; the use of circular oligonucleotides as vectors in cells to encode biologically active RNAs via RCT; and the use of small DNA circles to encode and extend human telomeres. Finally, we finish with some ideas about where the field may go in the future.
引用
收藏
页码:2540 / 2550
页数:11
相关论文
共 52 条
  • [1] Rolling circle amplification: a versatile tool for chemical biology, materials science and medicine
    Ali, M. Monsur
    Li, Feng
    Zhang, Zhiqing
    Zhang, Kaixiang
    Kang, Dong-Ku
    Ankrum, James A.
    Le, X. Chris
    Zhao, Weian
    [J]. CHEMICAL SOCIETY REVIEWS, 2014, 43 (10) : 3324 - 3341
  • [2] Signal amplification of padlock probes by rolling circle replication
    Banér, J
    Nilsson, M
    Mendel-Hartvig, M
    Landegren, U
    [J]. NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 1998, 26 (22) : 5073 - 5078
  • [3] CHARACTERIZATION OF A 3'-]5' EXONUCLEASE ACTIVITY IN THE PHAGE PHI-29-ENCODED DNA-POLYMERASE
    BLANCO, L
    SALAS, M
    [J]. NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 1985, 13 (04) : 1239 - 1249
  • [4] SELECTIVITY OF TRANSCRIPTION
    CHAMBERLIN, MJ
    [J]. ANNUAL REVIEW OF BIOCHEMISTRY, 1974, 43 : 721 - 775
  • [5] Telomeres and telomerase
    Chan, SRWL
    Blackburn, EH
    [J]. PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2004, 359 (1441) : 109 - 121
  • [6] A facile scanometric strategy for ultrasensitive detection of protein using aptamer-initiated rolling circle amplification
    Cheng, Wei
    Ding, Lin
    Chen, Yunlong
    Yan, Feng
    Ju, Huangxian
    Yin, Yibing
    [J]. CHEMICAL COMMUNICATIONS, 2010, 46 (36) : 6720 - 6722
  • [7] Detection of DNA point mutations and mRNA expression levels by rolling circle amplification in individual cells
    Christian, AT
    Pattee, MS
    Attix, CM
    Reed, BE
    Sorensen, KJ
    Tucker, JD
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2001, 98 (25) : 14238 - 14243
  • [8] ROLLING-CIRCLE RNA-SYNTHESIS - CIRCULAR OLIGONUCLEOTIDES AS EFFICIENT SUBSTRATES FOR T7 RNA-POLYMERASE
    DAUBENDIEK, SL
    RYAN, K
    KOOL, ET
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1995, 117 (29) : 7818 - 7819
  • [9] Diegelman A.M., 2000, CURR PROTOC NUCL ACI
  • [10] Mimicry of the hepatitis delta virus replication cycle mediated by synthetic circular oligodeoxynucleotides
    Diegelman, AM
    Kool, ET
    [J]. CHEMISTRY & BIOLOGY, 1999, 6 (08): : 569 - 576