Mitigating the Non-Specific Amplification in RCA: Assessment of the Role of Ligation and Exonuclease Digestion in Circular DNA Preparation

13 May 2021, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Layman Summary: Rolling circle amplification (RCA) is a popular and extensively used bioanalytical tool. Like any nucleic acid amplifications, non-specific amplification may occur in it and risk generating false positive readouts. The work described in the manuscript investigates non-specific amplification in RCA as a function of ligation and exonuclease digestion assays during the synthesis of circular DNA. In particular, it investigates and compares the role of three different ligation techniques, namely splint-padlock ligation, cohesive end (sticky end ligation), and self-annealing ligation. In addition, it also probes the role of single exonuclease vs dual exonuclease digestions. We employed real time fluorescence to quantify the effect of these factors. Finally, our work hypothesizes the possible origins of non-specific amplification in RCA.

Keywords

Rolling Circle amplification
Non-Specific Amplification
Real-Time Fluorescence

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