Mismatch oxidation assay: detection of DNA mutations using a standard UV/Vis microplate reader.

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Abstract

Simple, low-cost mutation detection assays that are suitable for low-throughput analysis are essential for diagnostic applications where the causative mutation may be different in every family. The mismatch oxidation assay is a simple optical absorbance assay to detect nucleotide substitutions, insertions, and deletions in heteroduplex DNA. The method relies on detecting the oxidative modification products of mismatched thymine and cytosine bases by potassium permanganate as it is reduced to manganese dioxide. This approach, unlike other methods commonly used to detect sequence variants, does not require costly labeled probes or primers, toxic chemicals, or a time-consuming electrophoretic separation step. The oxidation rate, and hence the presence of a sequence variant, is detected by measuring the formation of the potassium permanganate reduction product (hypomanganate diester), which absorbs at the 420-nm visible wavelength, using a standard UV/vis microplate reader.

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Tabone, T., Sallmann, G., & Cotton, R. G. H. (2009). Mismatch oxidation assay: detection of DNA mutations using a standard UV/Vis microplate reader. Methods in Molecular Biology (Clifton, N.J.), 578, 235–242. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-60327-411-1_15

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