Polymerase Spiral Reaction (PSR): A novel isothermal nucleic acid amplification method

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Abstract

In this study, we report a novel isothermal nucleic acid amplification method only requires one pair of primers and one enzyme, termed Polymerase Spiral Reaction (PSR) with high specificity, efficiency, and rapidity under isothermal condition. The recombinant plasmid of blaNDM-1 was imported to Escherichia coli BL21, and selected as the microbial target. PSR method employs a Bst DNA polymerase and a pair of primers designed targeting the blaNDM-1 gene sequence. The forward and reverse Tab primer sequences are reverse to each other at their 5′ end (Nr and N), whereas their 3′ end sequences are complementary to their respective target nucleic acid sequences. The PSR method was performed at a constant temperature 61 °C-65 °C, yielding a complicated spiral structure. PSR assay was monitored continuously in a real-time turbidimeter instrument or visually detected with the aid of a fluorescent dye (SYBR Greenl), and could be finished within 1 h with a high accumulation of 109 copies of the target and a fine sensitivity of 6 CFU per reaction. Clinical evaluation was also conducted using PSR, showing high specificity of this method. The PSR technique provides a convenient and cost-effective alternative for clinical screening, on-site diagnosis and primary quarantine purposes.

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Liu, W., Dong, D., Yang, Z., Zou, D., Chen, Z., Yuan, J., & Huang, L. (2015, July 29). Polymerase Spiral Reaction (PSR): A novel isothermal nucleic acid amplification method. Scientific Reports. Nature Publishing Group. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep12723

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