Author:
Nwe May Khat,Jangpromma Nisachon,Taemaitree Lapatrada
Abstract
AbstractLoop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) is a cost-effective and easy-to-perform assay that enables the direct detection of DNA. Its use in point-of-care diagnostic tests is growing, while it has the potential to be used in presumptive on-the-field forensic tests. Samples are often collected from complex matrices that contain high levels of contaminants. Herein, we evaluate the effect of seven common DNA amplification inhibitors on LAMP – bile salts, calcium chloride, hematin, humic acid, immunoglobulin G, tannic acid and urea. We study the effect of each inhibitor individually in real-time detection systems coupled with end-point measurements to delineate their inhibitory effects from the matrix in which they may be found. Our studies show LAMP inhibitors generally delay the onset of amplicon formation and quench fluorescence at similar or higher concentrations compared to PCR, but that end-point measurements of LAMP amplicons are unaffected. This is important as LAMP amplicons can be detected in non-fluorometric ways thus contributing to the assertions that LAMP is more robust to inhibitors than PCR.
Funder
Young Researcher Development Project from Khon Kaen University Year 2023
Khon Kaen University Scholarship for ASEAN and GMS Countries' Personnel of Academic 2021
Forensic Science Program, Faculty of Science, Khon Kaen University
Protein and Proteomics Research Center for Commercial and Industrial Purposes (ProCCI), Faculty of Science, Khon Kaen University
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
5 articles.
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