Polymer-based Nanosensors using Flight-Time Identification of Mononucleotides for Single-Molecule Sequencing
Steve Soper, Foundation Distinguished Professor; Director, Center of BioModular Multi-scale System for Precision Medicine, Adjunct Professor, Ulsan National Institute of Science & Technology, The University of Kansas
We are generating a single-molecule DNA sequencing platform that can
acquire sequencing information with high accuracy. The technology
employs high density arrays of nanosensors that read the identity of
individual mononucleotides from their characteristic flight-time through
a 2-dimensional (2D) nanochannel (~20 nm in width and depth; >100 µm
in length) fabricated in a thermoplastic via nano-imprinting (NIL). The
mononucleotides are generated from an intact DNA fragment using a
highly processive exonuclease, which is covalently anchored to a plastic
solid support contained within a bioreactor that sequentially feeds
mononucleotides into the 2D nanochannel. The identity of the
mononucleotides is deduced from a molecular-dependent flight-time
through the 2D nanochannel. The flight time is read in a label-less
fashion by measuring current transients induced a single mononucleotide
when it travels through a constriction with molecular dimensions (<10
nm in diameter) that are poised at the input/output ends of the flight
tube. In this presentation, our efforts on building these polymer
nanosensors using NIL in thermoplastics will be discussed and the
detection of single molecules using electrical transduction with their
identity deduced from the associated flight time provided. Finally,
information on the manipulation of single DNA molecules using
nanofluidic circuits will be discussed that takes advantage of forming
unique nano-scale features to shape electric fields for DNA manipulation
and serves as the functional basis of the nanosensing platform.
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