Solid-state, dye-labeled DNA detects volatile compounds in the vapor phase.

This paper demonstrates a previously unreported property of deoxyribonucleic acid-the ability of dye-labeled, solid-state DNA dried onto a surface to detect odors delivered in the vapor phase by changes in fluorescence. This property is useful for engineering systems to detect volatiles and provides...

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Main Authors: Joel White, Kathleen Truesdell, Lloyd B Williams, Mary S Atkisson, John S Kauer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-01-01
Series:PLoS Biology
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2211549
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spelling doaj-619792cef31c4dd284295d6b0ae643d92021-07-02T01:15:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Biology1544-91731545-78852008-01-0161e910.1371/journal.pbio.0060009Solid-state, dye-labeled DNA detects volatile compounds in the vapor phase.Joel WhiteKathleen TruesdellLloyd B WilliamsMary S AtkissonJohn S KauerThis paper demonstrates a previously unreported property of deoxyribonucleic acid-the ability of dye-labeled, solid-state DNA dried onto a surface to detect odors delivered in the vapor phase by changes in fluorescence. This property is useful for engineering systems to detect volatiles and provides a way for artificial sensors to emulate the way cross-reactive olfactory receptors respond to and encode single odorous compounds and mixtures. Recent studies show that the vertebrate olfactory receptor repertoire arises from an unusually large gene family and that the receptor types that have been tested so far show variable breadths of response. In designing biomimetic artificial noses, the challenge has been to generate a similarly large sensor repertoire that can be manufactured with exact chemical precision and reproducibility and that has the requisite combinatorial complexity to detect odors in the real world. Here we describe an approach for generating and screening large, diverse libraries of defined sensors using single-stranded, fluorescent dye-labeled DNA that has been dried onto a substrate and pulsed with brief exposures to different odors. These new solid-state DNA-based sensors are sensitive and show differential, sequence-dependent responses. Furthermore, we show that large DNA-based sensor libraries can be rapidly screened for odor response diversity using standard high-throughput microarray methods. These observations describe new properties of DNA and provide a generalized approach for producing explicitly tailored sensor arrays that can be rationally chosen for the detection of target volatiles with different chemical structures that include biologically derived odors, toxic chemicals, and explosives.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2211549
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joel White
Kathleen Truesdell
Lloyd B Williams
Mary S Atkisson
John S Kauer
spellingShingle Joel White
Kathleen Truesdell
Lloyd B Williams
Mary S Atkisson
John S Kauer
Solid-state, dye-labeled DNA detects volatile compounds in the vapor phase.
PLoS Biology
author_facet Joel White
Kathleen Truesdell
Lloyd B Williams
Mary S Atkisson
John S Kauer
author_sort Joel White
title Solid-state, dye-labeled DNA detects volatile compounds in the vapor phase.
title_short Solid-state, dye-labeled DNA detects volatile compounds in the vapor phase.
title_full Solid-state, dye-labeled DNA detects volatile compounds in the vapor phase.
title_fullStr Solid-state, dye-labeled DNA detects volatile compounds in the vapor phase.
title_full_unstemmed Solid-state, dye-labeled DNA detects volatile compounds in the vapor phase.
title_sort solid-state, dye-labeled dna detects volatile compounds in the vapor phase.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Biology
issn 1544-9173
1545-7885
publishDate 2008-01-01
description This paper demonstrates a previously unreported property of deoxyribonucleic acid-the ability of dye-labeled, solid-state DNA dried onto a surface to detect odors delivered in the vapor phase by changes in fluorescence. This property is useful for engineering systems to detect volatiles and provides a way for artificial sensors to emulate the way cross-reactive olfactory receptors respond to and encode single odorous compounds and mixtures. Recent studies show that the vertebrate olfactory receptor repertoire arises from an unusually large gene family and that the receptor types that have been tested so far show variable breadths of response. In designing biomimetic artificial noses, the challenge has been to generate a similarly large sensor repertoire that can be manufactured with exact chemical precision and reproducibility and that has the requisite combinatorial complexity to detect odors in the real world. Here we describe an approach for generating and screening large, diverse libraries of defined sensors using single-stranded, fluorescent dye-labeled DNA that has been dried onto a substrate and pulsed with brief exposures to different odors. These new solid-state DNA-based sensors are sensitive and show differential, sequence-dependent responses. Furthermore, we show that large DNA-based sensor libraries can be rapidly screened for odor response diversity using standard high-throughput microarray methods. These observations describe new properties of DNA and provide a generalized approach for producing explicitly tailored sensor arrays that can be rationally chosen for the detection of target volatiles with different chemical structures that include biologically derived odors, toxic chemicals, and explosives.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2211549
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